A case report of the differential diagnosis of Cellulosimicrobium cellulans-infected endocarditis combined with intracranial infection by conventional blood culture and second-generation sequencing

BMC Infect Dis. 2020 Nov 26;20(1):893. doi: 10.1186/s12879-020-05559-6.

Abstract

Background: Cellulosimicrobium cellulans is a gram-positive filamentous bacterium found primarily in soil and sewage that rarely causes human infection, especially in previously healthy adults, but when it does, it often indicates a poor prognosis.

Case presentation: We report a case of endocarditis and intracranial infection caused by C. cellulans in a 52-year-old woman with normal immune function and no implants in vivo. The patient started with a febrile headache that progressed to impaired consciousness after 20 days, and she finally died after treatment with vancomycin combined with rifampicin. C. cellulans was isolated from her blood cultures for 3 consecutive days after her admission; however, there was only evidence of C. cellulans sequences for two samples in the second-generation sequencing data generated from her peripheral blood, which were ignored by the technicians. No C. cellulans bands were detected in her cerebrospinal fluid by second-generation sequencing.

Conclusions: Second-generation sequencing seems to have limitations for certain specific strains of bacteria.

Keywords: Case report; Cellulosimicrobium cellulans; Infectious endocarditis; Second-generation sequencing.

Publication types

  • Case Reports

MeSH terms

  • Actinobacteria*
  • Actinomycetales Infections / blood
  • Actinomycetales Infections / diagnosis*
  • Actinomycetales Infections / drug therapy
  • Blood Culture
  • Diagnosis, Differential
  • Endocarditis / diagnosis*
  • Endocarditis / microbiology
  • Fatal Outcome
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Middle Aged
  • Rifampin / therapeutic use
  • Sequence Analysis, DNA
  • Vancomycin / therapeutic use

Substances

  • Vancomycin
  • Rifampin

Supplementary concepts

  • Cellulosimicrobium cellulans