1208 PART 5 Infectious Diseases
C. minutissimum (Erythrasma) Erythrasma is a cutaneous infection producing reddish-brown, macular, scaly, pruritic intertriginous
patches. The dermatologic presentation under the Wood’s lamp is
of coral red fluorescence. C. minutissimum appears to be a common
cause of erythrasma, although there is evidence for a polymicrobial
etiology in certain settings. This microbe has also been associated
with bacteremia in patients with hematologic malignancy. Erythrasma
responds to topical erythromycin, clarithromycin, clindamycin, or
fusidic acid, although more severe infections may require oral macrolide therapy.
Other Nondiphtherial Corynebacteria C. xerosis is a human
commensal found in the conjunctiva, nasopharynx, and skin. This
nontoxigenic organism is occasionally identified as a source of invasive
infection in immunocompromised or postoperative patients and prosthetic joint recipients. C. amycolatum is a closely related species but
tends to demonstrate more antibiotic resistance. C. striatum is found
in the anterior nares, skin, face, and upper torso of healthy individuals. Also nontoxigenic, this organism has been associated with invasive opportunistic infections in severely ill or immunocompromised
patients. C. glucuronolyticum is a nonlipophilic species that causes
male genitourinary tract infections such as prostatitis and urethritis.
These infections may be successfully treated with a wide variety of
antibacterial agents, including β-lactams, rifampin, aminoglycosides,
or vancomycin; however, the organism appears to be resistant to
fluoroquinolones, macrolides, and tetracyclines. C. imitans has been
identified in eastern Europe as a nontoxigenic cause of pharyngitis.
C. auris has been identified in children with otitis media; it is susceptible to fluoroquinolones, rifampin, tetracycline, and vancomycin
but resistant to penicillin G and variably susceptible to macrolides.
C. pseudodiphtheriticum is a nontoxigenic species that is part of the
normal human flora. Human infections—particularly endocarditis
of either prosthetic or natural valves and invasive pneumonia—have
been reported only rarely. Although C. pseudodiphtheriticum may be
isolated from the nasopharynx of patients with suspected diphtheria,
it is part of the normal flora and does not produce diphtheria toxin. C.
propinquum, a close relative of C. pseudodiphtheriticum, is part of CDC
group D-1 and has been isolated from the human respiratory tract and
blood. C. afermentans and subspecies belongs to CDC group ANF-1;
it is a rare human pathogen that has been isolated from human blood
and abscesses.
Rhodococcus Rhodococcus species are phylogenetically related to
the corynebacteria. These gram-positive coccobacilli have been associated with tuberculosis-like infections in humans with granulomatous
pathology. While R. equi is best known, other near-relative species
have been identified in human infections including R. fascians, R. erythropolis, R. rhodochrous, Gordonia bronchialis, G. sputi, G. terrae, and
Tsukamurella paurometabola.
R. equi has been recognized as a cause of pneumonia in horses since
the 1920s and as a cause of related infections in cattle, sheep, and swine.
It is found in soil as an environmental microbe. The organisms vary in
length; appear as spherical to long, curved, clubbed rods; and produce
large irregular mucoid colonies. R. equi cannot ferment carbohydrates
or liquefy gelatin and is often acid fast. An intracellular pathogen of
macrophages, R. equi can cause granulomatous necrosis and caseation.
This organism has most commonly been identified in pulmonary
infection, but infections of brain, bone, and skin also have been
reported. Most commonly, R. equi disease manifests as nodular and/or
cavitary pneumonia of the upper lobe—a picture similar to that seen in
tuberculosis or nocardiosis. Most patients are immunocompromised,
often by HIV infection. Subcutaneous nodular lesions also have been
identified. The involvement of R. equi should be considered when any
patient presents with a tuberculosis-like syndrome.
Infection due to R. equi has been treated successfully with antibiotics that penetrate intracellularly, including macrolides, clindamycin,
rifampin, and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole. β-Lactam antibiotics
have not been useful. The organism is routinely susceptible to vancomycin, which is considered the drug of choice.
Arcanobacteria Arcanobacterium haemolyticum was identified as an
agent of wound infections in U.S. soldiers in the South Pacific during
World War II. It appears to be a human commensal of the nasopharynx
and skin, but it is known to cause true pharyngitis as well as chronic
skin ulcers. In contrast to the much more common pharyngitis caused
by Streptococcus pyogenes, A. haemolyticum pharyngitis is associated
with a scarlatiniform rash on the trunk and proximal extremities in
about half of cases; this illness is occasionally confused with toxic shock
syndrome. Because A. haemolyticum pharyngitis primarily affects
teenagers, it has been postulated that the rash–pharyngitis syndrome
may represent co-pathogenicity, synergy, or opportunistic secondary
infection with Epstein-Barr virus. A. haemolyticum has also been
reported as a cause of bacteremia, soft tissue infections, osteomyelitis,
and cavitary pneumonia, predominantly in the setting of underlying
diabetes mellitus. The organism is susceptible to most β-lactams, macrolides, fluoroquinolones, clindamycin, vancomycin, and doxycycline.
However, resistance to trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole as well as tetracycline is common.
■ FURTHER READING
Kim R, Reboli AC: Other coryneform bacteria and Rhodococcus, in
Mandell, Douglas, and Bennett’s Principles and Practice of Infectious
Diseases, 9th ed. JE Bennett et al (eds). Philadelphia, Elsevier, 2020,
pp 2532–2542.
Moore LS et al: Corynebacterium ulcerans cutaneous diphtheria. Lancet Infect Dis 15:1100, 2015.
Saleeb PG: Corynebacterium diphtheriae (diphtheria), in Mandell,
Douglas, and Bennett’s Principles and Practice of Infectious Diseases, 9th ed. JE Bennett et al (eds). Philadelphia, Elsevier, 2020,
pp 2526–2531.
Sharma NC et al: Diphtheria. Nat Rev Dis Primers 5:81, 2019.
Wiedermann BL: Diphtheria in the 21st century: New insights and a
wake-up call. Clin Infect Dis 71:98, 2020.
Listeria monocytogenes is a ubiquitous environmental saprophyte
and an intracellular pathogen in several animals. Humans develop
L. monocytogenes infection—listeriosis—primarily through foodborne
transmission. The clinical spectrum of listeriosis ranges from febrile
gastroenteritis in healthy persons to invasive disease, including bacteremia and meningoencephalitis. Typical risk groups for invasive
disease are pregnant women and their neonates, older adults, and
immunocompromised persons.
■ MICROBIOLOGY
L. monocytogenes is a nonsporulating, facultatively anaerobic, short,
gram-positive rod that grows well on blood agar, demonstrating small
zones of β-hemolysis. Organisms sometimes appear gram-variable
and resemble cocci, diplococci, or diphtheroids; this appearance can
obscure the diagnosis. On light microscopy, L. monocytogenes demonstrates characteristic tumbling motility. It grows optimally at 30–37o
C
but can grow at refrigerator temperatures as low as 4o
C. Serotypes are
usually determined on the basis of somatic (O) and flagellar (H) antigens. Nearly all human illness is caused by serotypes 1/2a, 1/2b, and 4b.
■ PATHOGENESIS
L. monocytogenes lives in soil and decaying vegetable matter. Numerous
bird and mammal species are reservoirs. In addition to its ability to
grow at cold temperatures, Listeria’s tolerance to low-pH and high-salt
environments facilitates its environmental survival. Human infection
151 Listeria monocytogenes
Infections
Jennifer P. Collins, Patricia M. Griffin
1209CHAPTER 151 Listeria monocytogenes Infections
thus establishing foodborne transmission. It is now known that
L. monocytogenes transmission is almost always foodborne. Listeriosis
is a nationally notifiable disease in the United States. According to the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC’s) Foodborne Diseases Active Surveillance Network (FoodNet), the incidence of invasive
listeriosis was 2.4–3.7 cases per million persons during 2008–2019
(Fig. 151-1). Listeriosis is a substantial contributor to deaths from
foodborne illness despite being a relatively uncommon cause of illness.
Only about 3% of cases of listeriosis are part of a recognized
outbreak—i.e., have a source determined; however, outbreak investigations provide data on major food sources. Hot dogs and deli meats
were the major sources of U.S. outbreaks until 2002, when an outbreak
linked to turkey deli meat resulted in eight deaths and the recall of
>30 million pounds of meat. After that outbreak, the U.S. Department
of Agriculture’s Food Safety and Inspection Service issued new regulations and intensified testing for L. monocytogenes in ready-to-eat meat
and poultry plants, and producers added growth inhibitors. Since then,
these products have rarely been implicated in outbreaks, yet the incidence of listeriosis has not declined significantly in about two decades
(Fig. 151-1). Evidence that other sources are now more important is
supported by the marked decline in isolations of L. monocytogenes
from ready-to-eat meats (Fig. 151-1). Dairy products are an important
source, especially soft cheese made with raw (unpasteurized) milk or
produced from pasteurized milk in unsanitary facilities; ice cream and
raw milk also have caused outbreaks. Raw produce is another important source; outbreaks have been traced to packaged salad, sprouts,
cantaloupe and other fruit, caramel apples, and frozen vegetables. A
single strain of L. monocytogenes can survive in a production facility for
years. A small amount of contamination during production can lead
to much higher levels when food is ingested because of the organism’s
ability to grow at refrigerator temperatures.
Most people with invasive listeriosis are older adults, whose risk
increases with each decade over 59 years of age. Most other patients
have impaired cellular immunity associated with hematologic malignancy, solid organ or bone marrow transplantation, HIV infection,
or receipt of glucocorticoid or other immunosuppressive drugs. The
group at highest risk is pregnant women, who almost always have
only mild flulike symptoms but who transmit the infection to the fetus
through the placenta. Some neonates may acquire infection in the
hospital, as illustrated by an outbreak associated with contaminated
mineral oil. Rarely, children and adults with no risk factors develop
invasive listeriosis, probably through heavy contamination of food. The
typically occurs through ingestion of contaminated food. The infectious dose has not been well established but is likely to be very low for
persons with severely impaired cellular immunity. Increased gastric
pH, such as that due to proton pump inhibitors, probably promotes
the organism’s survival in the gastrointestinal tract. After transcytosis
across the intestinal epithelium, the bacteria travel via mesenteric
lymph nodes and the bloodstream to the liver and spleen, its target
organs; dissemination to other organs can occur. L. monocytogenes can
also migrate across the blood–brain barrier and the placenta.
Virulence factors, including a pore-forming cytolysin (listeriolysin O;
LLO) and phospholipases, facilitate evasion of intracellular killing
by mediating escape from the internalization vacuole; the organism can then enter the host cell cytosol. The surface protein ActA
facilitates direct cell-to-cell movement within the cytosol, allowing
L. monocytogenes to avoid encountering components of the host
immune system, such as antibodies and complement, during dissemination. Iron promotes listerial growth of the organism in vitro, an effect
that explains why listeriosis has been associated with iron-overload
conditions, including hemochromatosis.
■ IMMUNE RESPONSE
Although L. monocytogenes is ubiquitous in the environment, infection
is rare because of both innate and adaptive host immune responses.
Studies of mice have contributed to a detailed understanding of the
immune response to infection. Activation of innate immunity is
important for host survival. Interferon γ and tumor necrosis factor α
(TNF-α) are among the key cytokines involved in this response. T cells
are the primary drivers of the adaptive immune response, furthering
the clearance of infected cells. Cytotoxic (CD8+) T cells are the main
contributors to long-term immunity.
These immune mechanisms explain the association between invasive listeriosis and immunocompromising conditions, particularly
impaired cellular immunity. In light of numerous reports of invasive
listeriosis in patients treated with TNF-α inhibitors, the U.S. Food and
Drug Administration added listeriosis to the boxed warning for this
drug class. Because L. monocytogenes induces a vigorous cell-mediated
immune response, attenuated strains that express foreign antigens are
undergoing clinical trials as a cancer immunotherapy.
■ EPIDEMIOLOGY
More than 50 years after L. monocytogenes was first identified as a
human pathogen, a 1983 outbreak investigation implicated coleslaw,
Year
1988
0
1
2
3
4
1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002
5
6
0
1
2
3
4
5
9
8
7
6
2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 2018
2003: New regulations for ready-to-eat meat and poultry plants
2000: Listeriosis made nationally notifiable
1998: PulseNet began subtyping
1989: Case associated with turkey franks; new regulatory policies, industry efforts
Products yielding
L. monocytogenes, %
( )
Incidence
per million
( )
FIGURE 151-1 Incidence of listeriosis and percentage of ready-to-eat meat and poultry products with cultures that yielded L. monocytogenes, United States, 1989–2019.
Incidence data are from the Center for Disease Control and Prevention’s active sentinel site surveillance and include data from an early surveillance system (1986–1995)
and from the Foodborne Diseases Active Surveillance Network (FoodNet) database (1996–2019). The incidence was 7.3 cases per million in 1986. Product data for 1990–2017
are publicly available through the U. S. Department of Agriculture Food Safety and Inspection Service Microbiological Testing Program for Ready-to-Eat Meat and Poultry
Products.
1210 PART 5 Infectious Diseases
diagnosis of listeriosis in a hospitalized patient with new symptoms
should prompt investigation into the food provided during hospitalization as a source. In fact, outbreaks have been traced to food served
to hospitalized patients, especially those with immunocompromising
conditions; implicated foods include sandwiches, butter, precut celery,
Camembert cheese, sausage, tuna salad, and ice cream. A large 2017–
2018 outbreak of listeriosis in South Africa, linked to a ready-to-eat
processed meat product, disproportionately affected people living with
HIV and pregnant women. No outbreak-associated cases were detected
in the 15 other countries that imported the product; this discrepancy
suggests that listeriosis is underrecognized in low- to middle-income
countries, particularly those with a high prevalence of HIV infection.
■ CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS
L. monocytogenes infection can manifest in several ways. The incubation period differs according to host factors and dose consumed:
on average, this interval is <24 h for gastroenteritis and ~11 days for
invasive disease, although it can be much longer. Data from outbreak
investigations suggest that the incubation period is longer in pregnant
women than in nonpregnant adults.
Febrile Gastroenteritis Listeria organisms typically pass through
healthy people without causing symptoms, but acute febrile gastroenteritis can occur. Outbreak investigations of L. monocytogenes febrile
gastroenteritis have identified high organism density in implicated
foods, suggesting that a large inoculum must be ingested to cause illness. Major manifestations are fever, diarrhea, headache, and constitutional symptoms. Illness is usually self-limited, with symptoms lasting
an average of 1–3 days.
Bacteremia Bacteremia without a focus is the most common manifestation of invasive listeriosis. Major features are fever, chills, myalgias,
and arthralgias, sometimes preceded by nausea or diarrhea—markers
of the initial gut infection. Bacteremia can cause neurolisteriosis or
localized infection at other sites, in which case the diagnosis may be
suggested by neurologic or other focal findings. In a large French
cohort study, the 3-month mortality rate for L. monocytogenes bacteremia was 46%; death was associated with older age, female sex, neoplasia, multiorgan failure, worsening of preexisting organ dysfunction,
and monocytopenia (<200 cells/μL).
Neurolisteriosis L. monocytogenes has an affinity for the central nervous system. Neurolisteriosis is the second most common
manifestation of invasive listeriosis. Signs of meningitis along with
altered mental status, seizures, or focal neurologic findings suggest
meningoencephalitis. A recent French cohort study found that 84%
of patients with neurolisteriosis presented with meningoencephalitis.
Isolate-based surveillance systems may not distinguish between meningitis and meningoencephalitis.
Onset of neurologic disease can be sudden or subacute, taking place
over the course of several days. Patients typically have fever, headache,
nausea, and vomiting—findings similar to those in other bacterial
meningitides—but nuchal rigidity and meningeal signs occur less
commonly than in the latter conditions. Most patients (~75%) have
cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) white blood cell counts of <1000/μL (range,
100–5000/μL). CSF neutrophil predominance is typically less pronounced than in other bacterial meningitides. Approximately 30–40%
of patients have low CSF glucose levels. Gram’s staining of CSF sediment can show the expected gram-positive rods but commonly shows
no organisms and sometimes shows gram-positive cocci, diplococci, or
diphtheroids. In a U.S. study, L. monocytogenes caused <5% of cases of
community-acquired bacterial meningitis in adults.
Uncommon neurolisteriosis manifestations include cerebritis, focal
abscess, and rhombencephalitis (encephalitis of the cerebellum and
brainstem). Patients with macroscopic abscesses often have positive
blood cultures, but CSF findings may be normal in the absence of
concurrent meningitis. Abscesses may be misdiagnosed as a primary
or metastatic malignancy; they rarely occur in the cerebellum or spinal
cord. Rhombencephalitis disproportionately affects otherwise healthy
older adults. The classic presentation is biphasic, beginning with fever
and headache and continuing after several days with signs of brainstem
or cerebellar involvement, such as asymmetric cranial nerve palsies,
ataxia, tremor, hemiparesis, or hemisensory deficits. Nearly half of
patients with rhombencephalitis experience respiratory failure. The
diagnosis may be delayed by the subacute course and by CSF findings,
which are often only minimally abnormal. MRI is superior to CT for
the diagnosis of neurolisteriosis, including rhombencephalitis.
Overall, the 3-month mortality rate for neurolisteriosis was 30% in
a recent French cohort study; death was associated with the same risk
factors as those documented for bacteremia. Neurolisteriosis-associated
mortality was also higher among patients with a positive blood culture
and among those treated with dexamethasone. Nearly half of survivors
had long-term neurologic impairment.
Focal infections Hematogenous dissemination of L. monocytogenes infrequently causes endocarditis, pneumonia, localized abscesses
in the liver or other internal organs, peritonitis, septic arthritis, osteomyelitis, urinary tract infection, or skin lesions. Direct inoculation has
been reported as a rare cause of ocular infection, skin infection, and
lymphadenitis.
Infection in Pregnant Women and Neonates Pregnancyassociated listeriosis is most common in the third trimester, presumably because of impaired maternal cell-mediated immunity. Typically,
pregnant women either are asymptomatic or have a mild, flulike illness
with fever, headache, myalgias, or arthralgias. Neurolisteriosis and
death are rare in pregnant women without other risk factors. Although
nearly all infected women fully recover, only a minority (~5%) have a
normal delivery and postpartum course. In a study of 107 pregnancies
in which L. monocytogenes was isolated from the mother, fetus, or
neonate, 24% ended with fetal loss, 45% with premature birth, and
21% with abnormal delivery at term (i.e., fever, meconium release into
amniotic fluid, abnormal fetal heart rate). Moreover, 88% of the 82
live-born neonates were ill, including 49% who required intensive care.
Fetal loss is uncommon after 29 weeks of gestation. Granulomatosis
infantiseptica is a severe in utero infection caused by L. monocytogenes
and characterized by disseminated microabscesses and granulomas in
the skin, liver, and spleen; most infants with this condition are stillborn
or die soon after birth. Neonatal infection usually manifests in one of
two ways: early-onset sepsis is hypothesized to result from in utero
infection because it is typically diagnosed within 48 h after birth and
is often associated with prematurity, whereas late-onset meningitis is
thought to result from infection acquired at or soon after birth because
it is typically diagnosed at ~2 weeks of age in full-term infants. A study
of 128 pregnancy-associated listeriosis cases found that 47 (62%) of 76
ill neonates had early-onset disease. The case–fatality rate for neonatal
listeriosis is 10–50%.
■ DIAGNOSIS
Because symptoms of listeriosis overlap with those of other infections,
a high index of suspicion can facilitate timely diagnosis. Pregnant
women with suspected listeriosis should have blood drawn for cultures,
although blood cultures are positive only about half the time. Isolation
of L. monocytogenes from a normally sterile site, such as blood, CSF,
amniotic fluid, placental tissue, or fetal tissue, is diagnostic. Listeria
must be distinguished from other gram-positive rods, especially diphtheroids. L. monocytogenes can be isolated from sterile specimens on
routine medium; selective enrichment medium (such as PALCAM
Listeria Selective Agar or Oxford Agar) enhances the capacity for
isolation of the organism from nonsterile specimens, such as stool.
Stool culture is not indicated in the evaluation of invasive listeriosis;
culture on selective medium can be helpful for outbreak investigations
of febrile gastroenteritis. Commercially available multiplex polymerase
chain reaction panels for CSF specimens include L. monocytogenes as
a target and may be a useful adjunct to culture. Matrix-assisted laser
desorption/ionization time-of-flight (MALDI-TOF) mass spectrometry can rapidly identify an isolate as L. monocytogenes. Whole-genome
sequencing has been a valuable tool for solving outbreaks of listeriosis,
including a nosocomial outbreak associated with ice cream served in
hospital milkshakes.
1211CHAPTER 152 Tetanus
TREATMENT
Infections Caused by Listeria monocytogenes
L. monocytogenes treatment has not been evaluated in clinical trials.
Recommendations are based on in vitro animal studies and observational clinical data. High-dose ampicillin (adult dose, 2 g IV every 4 h)
or penicillin G (adult dose, 4 million units IV every 4 h) constitutes
first-line therapy. Because penicillins are only weakly bactericidal
against L. monocytogenes, many experts recommend adding gentamicin for synergy (1.0–1.7 mg/kg every 8 h if renal function is normal),
particularly if the infection is severe. Small studies have had varying
results with regard to the benefits of gentamicin. A large study provided evidence favoring amoxicillin–gentamicin as first-line therapy.
Patients who are allergic to penicillin should undergo desensitization or be treated with trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (TMP-SMX;
5 mg/kg per dose of the trimethoprim component, given IV every
6–12 h). TMP-SMX should be avoided during the first trimester
because it has been associated with neural tube and cardiovascular
defects and in the perinatal period because it may increase the risk of
kernicterus. Resistance to TMP-SMX has been reported; thus antibiotic susceptibility testing should be performed if this drug is considered. Treatment failures have been reported with meropenem despite
in vitro susceptibility of the organism. L. monocytogenes is susceptible
in vitro to several other drugs, including vancomycin, linezolid, tetracycline, macrolides, and fourth-generation fluoroquinolones (e.g.,
moxifloxacin), but relevant clinical reports are limited. Cephalosporins are not effective. A retrospective study of 31 patients found
significantly reduced survival rates among patients treated with
dexamethasone; the authors suggest avoiding this drug in neurolisteriosis. Prepartum antibiotic treatment of pregnant women with
listeriosis enhances the chance of delivering a healthy infant.
The optimal duration of antibiotic therapy has not been established. Treatment duration usually depends on the clinical syndrome, disease severity, patient attributes, and response to treatment.
The typical minimal treatment duration is 2 weeks for bacteremia,
2 weeks for early-onset neonatal disease, 3 weeks for meningitis,
4–6 weeks for endocarditis, and 6–8 weeks for brain abscess or
encephalitis. Longer courses may be needed when patients are
immunocompromised or are not improving as expected. Patients
with neurolisteriosis do not routinely require a follow-up lumbar
puncture if they are improving clinically during antibiotic therapy.
■ PREVENTION
Care of patients with listeriosis should be undertaken with standard
precautions because person-to-person transmission is rare. Implementation of general precautions to prevent foodborne illness can help
prevent listeriosis. These measures include fully cooking meats; washing fresh produce; cleaning hands, utensils, and kitchen surfaces after
handling uncooked foods; and avoiding unpasteurized dairy products.
Persons at increased risk for listeriosis should take additional precautions, including avoiding soft cheeses (particularly those made with
unpasteurized milk) and either avoiding ready-to-eat and delicatessen
foods (including meats, hot dogs, and smoked seafood) or heating these
foods until the internal temperature is 165°F or until they are steaming
hot. Additional CDC recommendations can be found at www.cdc.gov/
listeria/prevention.html. Hospital dietary services should implement
safe food-preparation procedures for immunocompromised patients
and should not serve these patients higher-risk foods. Testing and
treatment are not indicated for an asymptomatic person who has eaten
a product recalled because of L. monocytogenes contamination, even if
the person has risk factors for invasive listeriosis. TMP-SMX given as
prophylaxis for Pneumocystis jirovecii infection (e.g., to persons infected
with HIV or organ transplant recipients) helps prevent listeriosis.
■ FURTHER READING
Charlier C et al: Clinical features and prognostic factors of listeriosis:
The MONALISA National Prospective Cohort Study. Lancet Infect
Dis 17:510, 2017.
Farley MM: Listeria monocytogenes, in Principles and Practice of
Pediatric Infectious Diseases, 5th ed, Long SS et al (eds). Philadelphia,
Elselvier, 2018, pp 781–785.
Gottlieb SL et al: Multistate outbreak of listeriosis linked to turkey
deli meat and subsequent changes in US regulatory policy. Clin Infect
Dis 42:29, 2006.
Hof H: An update on the medical management of listeriosis. Expert
Opin Pharmacother 5:1727, 2004.
Mccollum JT et al: Multistate outbreak of listeriosis associated with
cantaloupe. N Engl J Med 369:944, 2013.
Radoshevich L, Cossart P: Listeria monocytogenes: Towards a complete picture of its physiology and pathogenesis. Nat Rev Microbiol
16:32, 2018.
Silk BJ et al: Foodborne listeriosis acquired in hospitals. Clin Infect
Dis 59:532, 2014.
Thomas J et al: Outbreak of listeriosis in South Africa associated with
processed meat. N Engl J Med 382:632, 2020.
Tetanus is an acute disease manifested by skeletal muscle spasm and
autonomic nervous system disturbance. It is caused by a powerful
neurotoxin produced by the bacterium Clostridium tetani and is completely preventable by vaccination. C. tetani is found throughout the
world, and tetanus commonly occurs where the vaccination coverage
rate is low. In developed countries, the disease is seen occasionally in
individuals who are incompletely vaccinated. In any setting, established
tetanus is a severe disease with a high mortality rate.
■ DEFINITION
Tetanus is diagnosed on clinical grounds (sometimes with supportive
laboratory confirmation of the presence of C. tetani; see “Diagnosis,”
below), and case definitions are often used to facilitate clinical and
epidemiologic assessments. The Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC) defines probable tetanus as “an acute illness with
muscle spasms or hypertonia in the absence of a more likely diagnosis.”
Neonatal tetanus is defined by the World Health Organization (WHO)
as “an illness occurring in a child who has the normal ability to suck
and cry in the first 2 days of life but who loses this ability between days
3 and 28 of life and becomes rigid and has spasms.” Given the unique
presentation of neonatal tetanus, the history generally permits accurate
classification of the illness with a high degree of probability. Maternal
tetanus is defined by the WHO as tetanus occurring during pregnancy
or within 6 weeks after the conclusion of pregnancy (whether with
birth, miscarriage, or abortion).
■ ETIOLOGY
C. tetani is an anaerobic, gram-positive, spore-forming rod whose
spores are highly resilient and can survive readily in the environment
throughout the world. Spores resist boiling and many disinfectants. In
addition, C. tetani spores and bacilli survive in the intestinal systems
of many animals, and fecal carriage is common. The spores or bacteria
enter the body through abrasions, wounds, or (in the case of neonates)
the umbilical stump. Once in a suitable anaerobic environment, the
organisms grow, multiply, and release tetanus toxin, an exotoxin that
enters the nervous system and causes disease. Very low concentrations
of this highly potent toxin can result in tetanus (minimal lethal human
dose, 2.5 ng/kg).
In 20–30% of cases of tetanus, no puncture entry wound is found.
Superficial abrasions to the limbs are the most common infection
sites in adults. Deeper infections (e.g., attributable to open fracture,
152 Tetanus
C. Louise Thwaites, Lam Minh Yen
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