International Journal of Infectious Diseases (Feb 2021)

First confirmed case of infant botulism in Africa, caused by a dual-toxin-producing Clostridium botulinum strain

  • Marné N. Vosloo,
  • Christoffel J. Opperman,
  • Hermanus D.W. Geyer,
  • Grace M. Setshedi,
  • Mushal Allam,
  • Stanford Kwenda,
  • Arshad Ismail,
  • Zamantungwa T.H. Khumalo,
  • Adrian J. Brink,
  • John A. Frean,
  • Jennifer Rossouw

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 103
pp. 164 – 166

Abstract

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Botulism, a rare life-threatening toxemia, is probably underdiagnosed in all of its forms in Africa. This study reports the first laboratory-supported case of infant botulism on the African continent. A 10-week-old, previously well infant presented with progressive global weakness, feeding difficulty, and aspiration pneumonia. During a lengthy hospitalization, a rare bivalent Clostridium botulinum strain, producing subtype B3 and F8 toxins and with a new multilocus sequence type, was isolated from stool. The infant was successfully treated with a heptavalent botulinum antitoxin infusion and pyridostigmine. Despite the relative rarity of infant botulism, this case illustrates the importance of maintaining a high level of clinical suspicion when assessing hypotonic infants. The value of modern diagnostic modalities in identifying and characterizing this under-recognized condition is also demonstrated.

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