Cargando…

Septic Olecranon Bursitis With Osteomyelitis Attributed to Cutibacterium acnes: Case Report and Literature Overview of the Dilemma of Potential Contaminants and False-Positives

We report an unusual case of acute septic olecranon bursitis, with probable olecranon osteomyelitis, where the only organism isolated in culture was initially considered a contaminant, Cutibacterium acnes. However, we ultimately considered it the likely causal organism when treatment for most of the...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Skedros, John G, Finlinson, Ethan D, Luczak, Meredith G, Cronin, John T
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cureus 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9985484/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36879721
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.34563
_version_ 1784900965075255296
author Skedros, John G
Finlinson, Ethan D
Luczak, Meredith G
Cronin, John T
author_facet Skedros, John G
Finlinson, Ethan D
Luczak, Meredith G
Cronin, John T
author_sort Skedros, John G
collection PubMed
description We report an unusual case of acute septic olecranon bursitis, with probable olecranon osteomyelitis, where the only organism isolated in culture was initially considered a contaminant, Cutibacterium acnes. However, we ultimately considered it the likely causal organism when treatment for most of the other more likely organisms failed. This typically indolent organism is prevalent in pilosebaceous glands, which are scarce in the posterior elbow region. This case illustrates the often challenging empirical management of a musculoskeletal infection when the only organism isolated might be a contaminant, but successful eradication requires continued treatment as if it is the causal organism. The patient is a Caucasian 53-year-old male who presented to our clinic with a second episode of septic bursitis at the same location. Four years prior, he had septic olecranon bursitis from methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus that was treated uneventfully with one surgical debridement and a one-week course of antibiotics. In the current episode reported here, he sustained a minor abrasion. Cultures were obtained five separate times because of no growth and difficulty eradicating the infection. One culture grew C. acnes on day 21 of incubation; this long duration has been reported. The first several weeks of antibiotic treatment failed to eradicate the infection, which we ultimately attributed to inadequate treatment of C. acnes osteomyelitis. Although C. acnes has a well-known propensity for false-positive cultures as typically reported in post-operative shoulder infections, treatment for our patient’s olecranon bursitis/osteomyelitis was successful only after several surgical debridements and a prolonged course of intravenous and oral antibiotics that targeted it as the presumptive causal organism. However, it was possible that C. acnes was a contaminant/superinfection, and another organism was the culprit, such as a Streptococcus or Mycobacterium species that was eradicated by the treatment regime targeted for C. acnes.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9985484
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher Cureus
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-99854842023-03-05 Septic Olecranon Bursitis With Osteomyelitis Attributed to Cutibacterium acnes: Case Report and Literature Overview of the Dilemma of Potential Contaminants and False-Positives Skedros, John G Finlinson, Ethan D Luczak, Meredith G Cronin, John T Cureus Infectious Disease We report an unusual case of acute septic olecranon bursitis, with probable olecranon osteomyelitis, where the only organism isolated in culture was initially considered a contaminant, Cutibacterium acnes. However, we ultimately considered it the likely causal organism when treatment for most of the other more likely organisms failed. This typically indolent organism is prevalent in pilosebaceous glands, which are scarce in the posterior elbow region. This case illustrates the often challenging empirical management of a musculoskeletal infection when the only organism isolated might be a contaminant, but successful eradication requires continued treatment as if it is the causal organism. The patient is a Caucasian 53-year-old male who presented to our clinic with a second episode of septic bursitis at the same location. Four years prior, he had septic olecranon bursitis from methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus that was treated uneventfully with one surgical debridement and a one-week course of antibiotics. In the current episode reported here, he sustained a minor abrasion. Cultures were obtained five separate times because of no growth and difficulty eradicating the infection. One culture grew C. acnes on day 21 of incubation; this long duration has been reported. The first several weeks of antibiotic treatment failed to eradicate the infection, which we ultimately attributed to inadequate treatment of C. acnes osteomyelitis. Although C. acnes has a well-known propensity for false-positive cultures as typically reported in post-operative shoulder infections, treatment for our patient’s olecranon bursitis/osteomyelitis was successful only after several surgical debridements and a prolonged course of intravenous and oral antibiotics that targeted it as the presumptive causal organism. However, it was possible that C. acnes was a contaminant/superinfection, and another organism was the culprit, such as a Streptococcus or Mycobacterium species that was eradicated by the treatment regime targeted for C. acnes. Cureus 2023-02-02 /pmc/articles/PMC9985484/ /pubmed/36879721 http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.34563 Text en Copyright © 2023, Skedros et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Infectious Disease
Skedros, John G
Finlinson, Ethan D
Luczak, Meredith G
Cronin, John T
Septic Olecranon Bursitis With Osteomyelitis Attributed to Cutibacterium acnes: Case Report and Literature Overview of the Dilemma of Potential Contaminants and False-Positives
title Septic Olecranon Bursitis With Osteomyelitis Attributed to Cutibacterium acnes: Case Report and Literature Overview of the Dilemma of Potential Contaminants and False-Positives
title_full Septic Olecranon Bursitis With Osteomyelitis Attributed to Cutibacterium acnes: Case Report and Literature Overview of the Dilemma of Potential Contaminants and False-Positives
title_fullStr Septic Olecranon Bursitis With Osteomyelitis Attributed to Cutibacterium acnes: Case Report and Literature Overview of the Dilemma of Potential Contaminants and False-Positives
title_full_unstemmed Septic Olecranon Bursitis With Osteomyelitis Attributed to Cutibacterium acnes: Case Report and Literature Overview of the Dilemma of Potential Contaminants and False-Positives
title_short Septic Olecranon Bursitis With Osteomyelitis Attributed to Cutibacterium acnes: Case Report and Literature Overview of the Dilemma of Potential Contaminants and False-Positives
title_sort septic olecranon bursitis with osteomyelitis attributed to cutibacterium acnes: case report and literature overview of the dilemma of potential contaminants and false-positives
topic Infectious Disease
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9985484/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36879721
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.34563
work_keys_str_mv AT skedrosjohng septicolecranonbursitiswithosteomyelitisattributedtocutibacteriumacnescasereportandliteratureoverviewofthedilemmaofpotentialcontaminantsandfalsepositives
AT finlinsonethand septicolecranonbursitiswithosteomyelitisattributedtocutibacteriumacnescasereportandliteratureoverviewofthedilemmaofpotentialcontaminantsandfalsepositives
AT luczakmeredithg septicolecranonbursitiswithosteomyelitisattributedtocutibacteriumacnescasereportandliteratureoverviewofthedilemmaofpotentialcontaminantsandfalsepositives
AT croninjohnt septicolecranonbursitiswithosteomyelitisattributedtocutibacteriumacnescasereportandliteratureoverviewofthedilemmaofpotentialcontaminantsandfalsepositives