Microorganisms (Jun 2020)

Case Report of an Injectional Anthrax in France, 2012

  • Jean-Marc Thouret,
  • Olivier Rogeaux,
  • Emmanuel Beaudouin,
  • Marion Levast,
  • Vincent Ramisse,
  • Fabrice V. Biot,
  • Eric Valade,
  • François Thibault,
  • Olivier Gorgé,
  • Jean-Nicolas Tournier

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms8070985
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 7
p. 985

Abstract

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(1) Background: Bacillus anthracis is a spore-forming, Gram-positive bacterium causing anthrax, a zoonosis affecting mainly livestock. When occasionally infecting humans, B. anthracis provokes three different clinical forms: cutaneous, digestive and inhalational anthrax. More recently, an injectional anthrax form has been described in intravenous drug users. (2) Case presentation: We report here the clinical and microbiological features, as well as the strain phylogenetic analysis, of the only injectional anthrax case observed in France so far. A 27-year-old patient presented a massive dermohypodermatitis with an extensive edema of the right arm, and the development of drug-resistant shocks. After three weeks in an intensive care unit, the patient recovered, but the microbiological identification of B. anthracis was achieved after a long delay. (3) Conclusions: Anthrax diagnostic may be difficult clinically and microbiologically. The phylogenetic analysis of the Bacillus anthracis strain PF1 confirmed its relatedness to the injectional anthrax European outbreak group-II.

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