Melioidosis is endemic in Taiwan. It is caused by infection with Burkholderia pseudomallei. A prolonged course of oral eradication therapy to avoid relapse after an intensive intravenous therapy is recommended to treat melioidosis. Melioidosis with cardiac involvement is rare and is often combined with septicemia, for which the mortality rate is 20-60%. The initial clinical presentations of melioidosis mimic Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection, which is the most common etiology of bacterial pericarditis in Taiwan. We present a case of non-septicemic melioidosis that presented as non-suppurative cardiac tamponade and left subcarinal lymphadenopathy. Underlying diseases included hepatitis B-related liver cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. The patient was successfully treated with 2 weeks of intravenous ceftazidime and 12 weeks of oral doxycycline, trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, and amoxicillin/clavulanate. Melioidosis-related pericarditis should be considered in the differential diagnoses of bacterial pericarditis in Taiwan.
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Am J Trop Med Hyg
September 2008
Division of Infectious Diseases and Division of Gastroenterology, Department of Internal Medicine, E-Da Hospital/I-Shou University, Kaohsiung County, Taiwan, Republic of China.
Melioidosis is endemic in Taiwan. It is caused by infection with Burkholderia pseudomallei. A prolonged course of oral eradication therapy to avoid relapse after an intensive intravenous therapy is recommended to treat melioidosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Microbiol Immunol Infect
August 2004
Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Internal Medicine, Kaohsiung Military General Hospital, Kaohsiung, Taiwan, ROC.
Melioidosis, caused by Burkholderia pseudomallei, has been increasingly recognized in Taiwan recently. Its isolation in liver abscess is rare compared to pulmonary melioidosis. We report a case of liver abscess due to B.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Trop
February 2000
Division of Medicine, Royal Darwin Hospital Clinical School and Tropical Medicine and International Health Unit, Menzies School of Health Research, Casuarina, NT, Australia.
Melioidosis was first described in Australia in an outbreak in sheep in 1949 in north Queensland (22 degrees S). Human melioidosis was first described from Townsville (19 degrees S) in 1950. Melioidosis is hyperendemic in the Top End of the Northern Territory (NT) and as in parts of northeastern Thailand it is the commonest cause of fatal community-acquired septicemic pneumonia.
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