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Edwardsiella tarda Bacteremia, Okayama, Japan,...
Journal article

Edwardsiella tarda Bacteremia, Okayama, Japan, 2005–2016 - Volume 25, Number 10—October 2019 - Emerging Infectious Diseases journal - CDC

Abstract

Edwardsiella tarda is primarily associated with gastrointestinal disease, but an increasing number of cases involving extraintestinal disease, especially E. tarda bacteremia, have been reported. Using clinical information of E. tarda bacteremia patients identified during January 2005-December 2016 in Japan, we characterized the clinical epidemiology of E. tarda bacteremia. A total of 182,668 sets of blood cultures were obtained during the study period; 40 (0.02%) sets from 26 patients were positive for E. tarda. The most common clinical manifestations were hepatobiliary infection, including cholangitis, liver abscess, and cholecystitis. Overall 30-day mortality for E. tarda bacteremia was 12%, and overall 90-day mortality was 27%. The incidence of E. tarda infection did not vary by season. We more frequently observed hepatobiliary infection in patients with E. tarda bacteremia than in patients with nonbacteremic E. tarda infections. E. tarda bacteremia is a rare entity that is not associated with high rates of death.

Authors

Kamiyama S; Kuriyama A; Hashimoto T

Journal

Emerging Infectious Diseases, Vol. 25, No. 10, pp. 1817–1823

Publisher

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

Publication Date

October 1, 2019

DOI

10.3201/eid2510.180518

ISSN

1080-6040

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