Purulent lymphadenitis caused by ST59 community-associated Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus in an infant
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.3855/jidc.18798Keywords:
CA-MRSA, Purulent lymphadenitis, multiple drug resistanceAbstract
Introduction: Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (CA-MRSA), which has the potential to produce serious infections, was a common cause of skin and soft tissue infections, acute purulent lymphadenitis was rare.
Case report: The patient was a female infant with lumps, tenderness, and fever on the right side of the neck and groin. Laboratory tests suggested a bacterial infection. The diagnosis of acute purulent lymphadenitis was made based on the clinical signs and the results of a supporting exam. After three days, MRSA developed in the secretions of suppurative lymph nodes. Her mother's nasopharyngeal swab sample results revealed MRSA. The genotypes of two bacterial strains that underwent molecular analysis were identical.
Results: 17 days after admission, the patient showed signs of clinical recovery.
Conclusions: The incident brought to light the possible spread of CA-MRSA in the Chinese population. Even without a definite path of infection, CA-MRSA should be taken into consideration when the standard treatment for children with acute purulent lymphadenitis is ineffective. Early infancy MRSA acquisition may be mostly caused by maternal-infant horizontal transmission.
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