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      Prolonged tedizolid use in cutaneous non-tuberculous mycobacterial infection

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          Abstract

          Cutaneous non-tuberculous mycobacterial (NTM) infections are an emerging infectious disease and require a protracted course of combination antibiotics. Antimicrobial choice is limited by resistance and toxicity. Tedizolid is a new oxazolidinone antibiotic with in vitro activity against some NTM, but its use in the management of extrapulmonary NTM has not been described. We report on the utility of prolonged tedizolid use (8 months), after linezolid intolerance, in combination therapy in a case of difficult Mycobacterium chelonae cutaneous infection. Although tedizolid contributed to clinical remission, it may have also contributed to a multifocal peripheral neuropathy. Its efficacy may also have been limited by continued immunosuppression, with evidence to suggest disease relapse or treatment failure after completion of combination therapy. Tedizolid can be considered, with caution, in combination therapy for difficult cases of cutaneous NTM infection.

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          An official ATS/IDSA statement: diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of nontuberculous mycobacterial diseases.

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            The Sick and the Weak: Neuropathies/Myopathies in the Critically Ill.

            Critical illness polyneuropathies (CIP) and myopathies (CIM) are common complications of critical illness. Several weakness syndromes are summarized under the term intensive care unit-acquired weakness (ICUAW). We propose a classification of different ICUAW forms (CIM, CIP, sepsis-induced, steroid-denervation myopathy) and pathophysiological mechanisms from clinical and animal model data. Triggers include sepsis, mechanical ventilation, muscle unloading, steroid treatment, or denervation. Some ICUAW forms require stringent diagnostic features; CIM is marked by membrane hypoexcitability, severe atrophy, preferential myosin loss, ultrastructural alterations, and inadequate autophagy activation while myopathies in pure sepsis do not reproduce marked myosin loss. Reduced membrane excitability results from depolarization and ion channel dysfunction. Mitochondrial dysfunction contributes to energy-dependent processes. Ubiquitin proteasome and calpain activation trigger muscle proteolysis and atrophy while protein synthesis is impaired. Myosin loss is more pronounced than actin loss in CIM. Protein quality control is altered by inadequate autophagy. Ca(2+) dysregulation is present through altered Ca(2+) homeostasis. We highlight clinical hallmarks, trigger factors, and potential mechanisms from human studies and animal models that allow separation of risk factors that may trigger distinct mechanisms contributing to weakness. During critical illness, altered inflammatory (cytokines) and metabolic pathways deteriorate muscle function. ICUAW prevention/treatment is limited, e.g., tight glycemic control, delaying nutrition, and early mobilization. Future challenges include identification of primary/secondary events during the time course of critical illness, the interplay between membrane excitability, bioenergetic failure and differential proteolysis, and finding new therapeutic targets by help of tailored animal models.
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              Extrapulmonary Infections Associated with Nontuberculous Mycobacteria in Immunocompetent Persons

              The >120 recognized species of nontuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) share common features: 1) they are facultative pathogens; 2) evidence of human-to-human transmission is lacking; 3) some NTM species are ubiquitous and others have more restricted distribution; 4) treatment may be difficult and vary according to the involved organism and disease site; and 5) pathogenesis is still undefined, depending on the interaction between the microorganism and the host's immune system ( 1 ). About 90% of cases involve the pulmonary system; the rest involve lymph nodes, skin, soft tissues, and bones. Less frequently reported are central nervous system disease, keratitis, and otitis media ( 1 , 2 ). We reviewed the epidemiology, clinical features, diagnosis, and treatment of the most common extrapulmonary diseases associated with NTM in immunocompetent persons ( 2 – 5 ). Lymphadenitis Localized lymphadenitis most commonly affects children; peak incidence occurs at 1–5 years of age ( 6 ). The route of infection is hypothesized to be by way of the lymphatic vessels that drain the mouth and pharynx. The most frequently isolated species is Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC), followed by M. scrofulaceum, M. malmoense, and M. hemophilum ( 7 ). However, a growing number of previously unrecognized slow-growing mycobacteria have been implicated with increasing frequency in reports of isolated or microclustered cases (Table 1) ( 8 ). Table 1 Less frequently encountered mycobacterial species recovered from immunocompetent persons with lymphadenitis* Mycobacterium sp. No. cases reported Identification method M. bohemicum 3 GS M. celatum 1 RH, HPLC, GS M. genavense 1 RH, GS M. heckeshornense 1 GS M. heidelbergense 1 GS M. interjectum 4 GS M. lentiflavum 5 HPLC, GS M. palustre 1 GS M. parmense 1 HPLC, GS M. simiae 4 RH, HPLC, GS M. triplex 4 GS M. tusciae 1 HPLC, GS *Most persons were children. GS, gene sequencing; RH, reverse hybridization; HPLC, high-performance liquid chromatography. Generally, NTM adenitis is an indolent disease; most patients are otherwise healthy and have as their sole clinical sign a chronic neck mass that does not respond to antimicrobial drug therapy. The disease is usually unilateral and occurs in the cervical, submandibular, or preauricular lymph nodes, although parotid and postauricular node involvement has been reported. The nodes enlarge and may rapidly soften and rupture, forming a draining sinus. Although spontaneous regression has occasionally been described, healing usually occurs by fibrosis and calcification. Pyogenic and tuberculous adenitis are the most important differential diagnoses. Although a presumptive diagnosis of nontuberculous mycobacterial adenitis can be made on the basis of clinical history and physical examination, definitive diagnosis depends upon the recovery of mycobacteria. Every effort should be made to obtain material for culture and further identification. Cultures of draining and ulcerated lesions, especially when swabs are used for specimen sampling, have been shown to give a lower diagnostic yield than do needle aspirates ( 9 ) or tissue biopsy samples. For recovery of NTM, use of a liquid medium or radiometric growth detection are regarded as the standard. Moreover, in children who have not been vaccinated with M. bovis BCG, purified protein derivative skin testing may be used as a surrogate test to diagnose chronic cervicofacial lymphadenitis ( 10 ). Histologic appearance of necrotizing granulomatous inflammation with various degrees of caseation is also diagnostic. Treatment of uncomplicated NTM lymphadenitis is complete surgical excision. Incision and drainage are discouraged because they usually lead to sinus tract formation with chronic discharge. In a recent well-designed trial including 100 children with culture- or PCR-confirmed diagnoses, surgery was more effective than chemotherapy; cure rates were 96% and 66%, respectively ( 11 ). Total excision should be performed as early as possible to maximize recovery of the causative agent, to prevent further cosmetic damage, to prevent extensive spread and subsequently more difficult excision, and to cure disease. For some patients, however, surgery is associated with substantial risk either because of a discharging sinus or proximity of facial nerve branches. For these patients, chemotherapy preceded by a diagnostic biopsy sample is recommended. Chemotherapy should also be considered for patients in whom lymphadenitis recurs after surgery or for whom all abnormal tissue could not be excised. Recent data indicate fine-needle aspiration as the preferred diagnostic technique for patients with nontuberculous mycobacterial adenitis who do not undergo surgical excision. The optimal chemotherapeutic regimen and its duration are still undetermined, but combination therapy including clarithromycin and a rifamycin, either rifampin or rifabutin and/or ethambutol, may be beneficial. Osteoarticular Infections NTM infections involving the musculoskeletal system are uncommon. However, when they do occur, both rapid- and slow-growing species have been implicated in chronic granulomatous infections involving tendon sheaths, bursae, bones, and joints. These are usually acquired by direct inoculation of the pathogen from an environmental source or a contiguous infection focus as a consequence of surgical procedures, penetrating trauma, injuries, or needle injections. Most affected patients are immunocompetent, but some mycobacterial species, such as M. chelonae and M. hemophilum, are almost entirely recovered from patients with serious underlying diseases (HIV infection, immunosuppressive therapy, or blood disorders) ( 4 ). In a recent study of vertebral osteomyelitis caused by NTM ( 12 ), various degrees of immunosuppression were found in 17 (51.5%) of 33 patients. From the 31 patients with spinal infection studied, the following NTM species were recovered: MAC (n = 13), M. xenopi (n = 7), M. fortuitum (n = 5), M. abscessus (n = 3), M. kansasii (n = 1), M. simiae (n = 1), and unidentified NTM species (n = 1). M. hemophilum also causes NTM osteomyelitis infections in bone marrow and solid organ transplants ( 13 ). The hand and wrist are the most frequently reported sites of NTM tenosynovitis because of their abundance of synovial fluid and tissue combined with a higher probability of penetrating injury. Most frequently, M. marinum and M. kansasii are involved; less frequently, M. avium complex, M. szulgai, M. terrae, M. fortuitum, M. chelonae, M. abscessus, M. malmoense, and M. xenopi are found ( 14 ). Clinically, osteoarticular infections caused by NTM are indistinguishable from tuberculosis-associated infections. Signs and symptoms such as localized pain (with or without neurologic impairment), joint stiffness and swelling, low-grade fever, sweating, chills, anorexia, malaise, and weight loss have been reported (Table 2). On rare occasions, suppuration followed by extensive necrosis of the synovial tissue may occur ( 3 ), although in more severe cases infection may extend to the periosteum and lead to osteomyelitis ( 3 ). The clinical course of the disease is typically protracted; average time from onset of symptoms to diagnosis may be as long as 10 months. To prevent severe tissue destruction and neurologic disorders, prompt and accurate diagnosis is essential. Diagnosis relies on clinical suspicion and must be considered for patients with increasing musculoskeletal system signs, those with inflammation after penetrating or blunt trauma, and those with underlying risk factors who undergo a medical procedure. Culture of synovial fluid and tissue biopsy are mandatory for definitive diagnosis and identification of the causative agent. Computed tomography and sonography may help guide percutaneous tissue biopsy sampling of infected areas or diagnostic aspiration of intraarticular fluid ( 15 ). Histopathologic examination has shown a spectrum of inflammatory changes, including granulomatous lesions with or without caseation ( 3 ). Table 2 Clinical signs associated with osteoarticular infections caused by nontuberculous mycobacteria Disease Affected site Mycobacterium spp. Underlying diseases and risk factors 
(no. cases reported) Arthritis, osteomyelitis Thumb (interphalangeal joint) M. malmoense Rheumatoid arthritis (1) Arthritis Knee, ankle M. xenopi None* (6), invasive medical procedure (1) Arthritis Multiple joints: wrist, knee, finger, ankle, elbow, vertebrae, shoulder M. kansasii AIDS (13), rheumatoid arthritis (3), systemic lupus erythematous (2), renal transplant (2), polymyositis (1), progressive systemic sclerosis (1), myelodysplasia (1), none (26), localized trauma (10), steroid therapy (10) Arthritis Knee M. kansasii Prosthetic joint (1) Synovitis (carpal tunnel syndrome) Wrist M. szulgai No underlying disease, fish-tank cleaning (2) Tenosynovitis Hand M. intracellulare None* (1) Tenosynovitis Hand M. chelonae Penetrating injury (2), fracture (1),
Immunosuppression (3) Tenosynovitis Hand, wrist M. avium complex Steroid injection (1), trauma (8), surgery (4) Osteomyelitis Sternum, foot, elbow M. wolinsky Cardiac surgery (1), stepped on nail (1), open fracture (1) Osteomyelitis Femur, tibia, calcaneus, toe, elbow, sternum M. goodii Open fracture (4), stepped on nail (1), surgery (2), penetrating trauma (2), puncture wound (1) Osteomyelitis Wrist M. scrofulaceum Diabetes (1) Osteomyelitis Hand, ankle, wrist M. marinum Fisherman exposed to aquarium (25), trauma (1), local or systemic steroids (20) Osteomyelitis M. ulcerans Traumatic injury (213) Osteomyelitis Vertebrae M. avium complex, M. xenopi, M. fortuitum, M. abscessus, M. kansasii, M. simiae Systemic lupus erythematous and treatment with steroids (7), AIDS (4), interferon receptor defect (3), carcinoma (1), renal failure (1), chronic granulomatous disease (1), none* (16) Osteomyelitis Vertebrae M. xenopi Vertebral disk surgery (58) Osteomyelitis Tibia M. conceptionense Fracture (1) Osteomyelitis Vertebrae M. abscessus Trauma to the back (1) Osteomyelitis Vertebrae M. avium complex Trauma to the back (1) Osteomyelitis Lower extremity, upper extremity, vertebrae, disseminated disease M. hemophilum AIDS (21), bone marrow or solid organ transplant (7); AIDS plus solid organ transplant (1),
lymphoma (2), polycythemia vera (1) *Otherwise healthy with no underlying disease or risk factor. Lack of the following have greatly limited development of consensus guidelines for the treatment of musculoskeletal infections caused by NTM: correlation between in vitro susceptibility testing and clinical outcome, standardized antimicrobial-drug susceptibility testing for most NTM species, and clinical trials comparing different therapeutic regimens among an adequate number of patients. Prolonged chemotherapy with an isolate-tailored drug combination associated with surgical debridement is currently recommended for all musculoskeletal infections, especially in patients with abscesses ( 12 ). Skin and Soft Tissue Infections Skin and soft tissue infections usually occur after traumatic injury, surgery, or cosmetic procedures, which may expose a wound to soil, water, or medical devices occasionally contaminated with environmental mycobacteria. Although the epidemiology and clinical presentations of NTM responsible for skin and soft tissue infections differ, some species (MAC, M. kansasii, M. xenopi, and M. marinum) have been reported worldwide, whereas others (M. ulcerans) have limited geographic distribution. M. marinum causes diseases in many fish species and is distributed worldwide. It is an opportunistic pathogen of humans, in whom infection is infrequent and occurs by direct injury from fish fins or bites or after cutaneous trauma and subsequent exposure to contaminated water or other sources of infection (shrimp, shellfish, frogs, turtles, dolphin, eels, and oysters). An increasing number of cases have been reported from most countries with temperate climates ( 1 ). Predisposing occupations and activities include fishery worker, seafood handler, fish-tank owner, fisherman, pet shop worker, and water-related recreational exposure ( 4 ). Consistent with the organism’s growth at low temperatures, M. marinum infections are usually limited to the skin and confined, with few exceptions, to 1 extremity. For fish-tank owners, disease is often located in the hand or fingers; for those who swim in pools, the elbow is affected for 85%, followed by knee and foot ( 16 ). The incubation period is usually 1 skin lesions ( 17 ). At the inoculation site, an erythematous or bluish papulonodular lesion (≈0.5–3 cm) develops and slowly enlarges, becoming more tender until it suppurates ( 18 ) (Figure). In ≈33% of patients, M. marinum infection may spread to deeper structures (soft tissues, tendons, and bone) ( 19 ), leading to extensive scarring and varying degrees of functional impairment. Less frequently, the disease extends from the inoculation site to regional lymph nodes along the lymphatic vessels, mimicking the clinical appearance of cutaneous sporotrichosis ( 20 ). Key elements for diagnosis of M. marinum infection are a history of exposure to potential sources of infection; a histopathologic appearance of granulomatous inflammation but no caseation; and culture growth of M. marinum, which strongly depends on incubation temperature. For localized skin lesions without a history of exposure to fish tanks, swimming pools, or tropical fish, other NTM must be considered ( 21 ). Figure Mycobacterium marinum infection of the arm of a fish-tank worker. Although presumptive identification can rely on a few biochemical and phenotypic tests such as production of photochromogenic pigment, negative nitrate reduction, and positive tests for urease and Tween 80 hydrolysis, definitive identification involves reverse hybridization techniques, or, alternatively, high-performance liquid chromatography analysis of mycolic acids and DNA sequencing assays ( 22 , 23 ). In vitro susceptibility test results of M. marinum clinical isolates have been reported extensively in the literature. Only clarithromycin, minocycline, and amikacin provide complete coverage (100% susceptibility); doxycycline, rifampin, and trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole encounter different degrees of resistance ( 24 ). Drug-susceptibility testing of M. marinum isolates is recommended only for patients who remain culture positive after several months of therapy ( 25 ). Although a standardized regimen for M. marinum disease is still undefined, monotherapy with doxycycline, minocycline, trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole, or clarithromycin should be limited to patients with mild disease only. Clarithromycin combined with ethambutol or rifampin is likely the best combination therapy. Treatment with 2 agents should be continued for at least 1–2 months after resolution of skin lesions. In addition, surgical treatment (from mild debridement to amputation) may be required, especially when deep structures are involved ( 2 ). M. ulcerans is the causative agent of Buruli ulcer, a disease reported in >30 countries, mainly in tropical and subtropical regions of Western and Central Africa but also in Central and South America, Southeast Asia, and the Western Pacific region ( 26 ). Currently limited knowledge is mainly the result of a low number of reported cases and inadequate surveillance. Recently, however, studies conducted in some areas in which M. ulcerans is highly endemic have reported infection rates higher than those for either tuberculosis or leprosy ( 27 ). Epidemiologic data on detection of M. ulcerans DNA in aquatic insects (e.g., orders Odonata and Coleoptera) and snails, as well as in the biofilm of aquatic plants, strongly suggest that the organism is associated with exposure to surface water involved in environmental changes such as mining, deforestation, agriculture, and hydraulic installations and that it is likely to occupy a specific niche within aquatic environments from which it is transmitted to humans by an unknown mechanism ( 28 ). It is hypothesized that M. ulcerans reaches the human dermis through a cut or wound contaminated with water, soil, or vegetation. M. ulcerans is a unique species able to produce a potent, virulence-associated toxin called mycolactone, which prevents phagocytosis of live organisms and induces tissue destruction by its cytotoxic and immunosuppressive properties. Although all age groups can be affected, Buruli ulcer is more frequent among children <15 years of age; the lower limbs (which are involved 3.2× more often than the upper limbs) are the most frequently affected sites ( 29 ). The incubation period varies but is generally <3 months ( 4 ). Buruli ulcer usually starts as a single painless subcutaneous nodule or papule, which later moves to form an ulcer with undermined edges ( 30 ). Spontaneous healing usually takes 4–6 months and involves extensive scar formation, resulting in severe deformity with joint contracture, subluxation, atrophy, or distal lymph edema ( 4 ). Sometimes tissue destruction may be so extensive that amputation is unavoidable. In addition, dissemination to distant sites can occur, especially in younger patients (<15 years). Multiple lesions represent the most severe form of the disease; a high percentage of cases are osteomyelitis, often leading to amputation or even death ( 29 ). Disabilities are frequent, estimated for 25% to 58% of cases ( 31 ). Although in M. ulcerans–endemic areas, diagnosis and treatment are determined essentially by clinical appearances, laboratory methods are available. These methods consist of direct smear examination of specimens taken from the ulcer edge or from tissue (≈40% sensitivity); culture incubated at 29°C–33°C for 6–8 weeks (≈20%–60% sensitivity); histopathologic necrosis of subcutaneous tissues and dermal collagen accompanied by a scant nongranulomatous inflammatory reaction embedding acid-fast bacilli (≈90% sensitivity) ( 30 ); and PCR, a highly sensitive test that can produce results within 2 days but is still confined to reference and research laboratories ( 32 ). Case confirmation requires at least 2 positive results from the above diagnostic tests ( 33 ). A standardized method for susceptibility testing of M. ulcerans is not currently available ( 25 ). The main treatment for Buruli ulcer is surgery. To ensure complete removal of visibly affected tissue and to prevent recurrence, excision should include a wide margin, including healthy tissue. Although in early disease simple excision is usually curative, in advanced disease wide and traumatizing excision is needed, followed by skin grafting and long hospital stays. Although many antimicrobial agents have demonstrated excellent in vitro and in vivo activity against M. ulcerans clinical isolates, further studies are needed to assess whether experimental susceptibility data will correlate with clinical outcome ( 33 ). A recent report stated that rifampin plus streptomycin (1×/day for 4 weeks) and surgical excision inhibited the spread of infection and converted early lesions (nodules and plaques) from culture positive to culture negative ( 34 ). In edematous M. ulcerans disease, the most rapidly progressive form, rifampin and streptomycin have demonstrated a dramatically beneficial effect. Other treatments (e.g., topical phenytoin powder, topical nitrogen oxides, and dressing plus triple-drug therapy [rifampin, amikacin, and heparin]) are still being evaluated. M. bovis BCG vaccination appears to offer some short-term protection, especially against the most severe form of the disease ( 33 ). Cutaneous MAC disease occurs by direct inoculation (trauma, surgery, injection) and is characterized by skin lesions such as ulceration, abscess with sinus formation, or erythematous plaque with a yellow crusted base. The lesions are indolent, with little or no lymph node reaction or systemic symptoms; some MAC skin infections resemble Lupus vulgaris infections. Diagnosis requires a high index of suspicion; a history of exposure to a potential source of infection may be suggestive. For an accurate diagnosis, histopathology, proper acid-fast bacilli identification, and susceptibility testing are needed. A combination of excision (or surgical debridement) and chemotherapy is usually required. Therapy is continued for 6–12 months and consists of at least 3 drugs, usually clarithromycin, rifampin, and ethambutol. Additional therapy with amikacin is sometimes included for 6 weeks ( 2 ). Rapidly growing mycobacteria (RGM) are a complex group of environmental pigmented and nonpigmented mycobacteria. Their optimal incubation temperatures range from 25°C to 40°C, and they are characterized by a rapid (within 7 days) growth rate on subculture. Organisms responsible for disease in humans belong to the M. fortuitum group, the M. chelonae/abscessus group, and the M. smegmatis group; M. abscessus, M. fortuitum, and M. chelonae are the most common species involved in cutaneous and soft tissue infections. Able to survive in harsh conditions, these organisms produce biofilm in aquatic environments, mostly in piped water systems from which large clumps of mycobacteria are released into water and can be subsequently transmitted to humans ( 35 , 36 ). In addition, RGM are resistant to sterilizing agents (2% formaldehyde and glutaraldehyde), antiseptics (organomercurial compounds), and other common disinfectants ( 37 ). Clinical manifestations of RGM disease largely depend on the immunocompetence of the infected person. Cutaneous and soft tissue infections may appear as a single lesion in an immunocompetent person, usually after penetrating trauma or invasive surgical procedure at the site of infection (M. fortuitum is the predominant causative agent), or they may appear as multiple or disseminated lesions, usually associated with immunosuppressive treatments (especially long-term treatment with steroids) or other immunosuppressive conditions or concurrent illnesses ( 38 ). For the latter, M. chelonae and M. abscessus are the predominant causative agents. Several reported infections that occurred after traumatic, cosmetic, or other medical procedures are summarized in Table 3. In a large outbreak of RGM infection related to pedicures, the median onset of signs and symptoms was 3 weeks; but for some, signs and symptoms were delayed as long as 4 months after exposure ( 39 ). Histopathologic examination of lesions showed suppurative granulomata and abscesses. Areas of necrosis were typically seen, but caseation was uncommon ( 21 ). Definitive diagnosis of clinically suspected RGM soft tissue disease can be made by culture of organisms from drainage material, aspiration fluid, or tissue biopsy sample. When NTM disease is suspected on the basis of clinical signs, with any patient history, laboratory staff should be alerted so they can use appropriate isolation protocols (M. chelonae and some strains of M. abscessus are relatively heat intolerant and can be recovered by primary isolation at 30°C). Identification of RGM at the species level is of utmost importance because treatment regimens and consequently clinical outcome are strongly species related. Proper identification involves molecular techniques ( 22 ) coupled with a few traditional biochemical and phenotypic tests (use of the carbohydrates citrate, mannitol, inositol, and sorbitol; tolerance to 5% NaCl; nitrate reduction; iron uptake; and 3-day arylsulfatase activity) ( 35 ). Susceptibility testing performed by the broth microdilution technique ( 25 ) is essential for choosing the most effective drug therapy and monitoring for the development of mutational drug resistance ( 2 ). Most experts recommend the use of specific antimicrobial drugs, given in combination to avoid the emergence of drug resistance. Treatment for the M. fortuitum group may include amikacin, cefoxitin, ciprofloxacin, the newer quinolones gatifloxacin and moxifloxacin, sulfonamides, and imipenem. Some degree of susceptibility to doxycycline and clarithromycin has been reported. M. abscessus strains are usually susceptible to amikacin, cefoxitin, imipenem, clarithromycin, and azithromycin; M. chelonae are usually susceptible to amikacin, imipenem, tobramycin, clarithromycin, and sometimes linezolid. Clarithromycin is generally the drug of choice for localized disease caused by M. chelonae and M. abscessus ( 5 , 35 ). The duration of therapy is usually 4 months for mild disease and 6 months for severe disease. Surgery is an important complementary tool for treating these infections, depending on disease severity and location. Table 3 Skin and soft tissue infections caused by rapidly growing mycobacteria Type of infection or procedure Mycobacterium spp. Clinical findings Posttraumatic wound infections M. fortuitum, M. chelonae, M. abscessus, M. wolinskyi, M. goodii, M. porcinum Subcutaneous abscesses, cellulitis Pedicures M. fortuitum, M. chelonae, M. mageritense Furunculosis Subcutaneous, intraarticular, or periarticular Injections M. chelonae, M. abscessus Subcutaneous abscesses, painful nodules, multiple sinus tracts, joint infections, fever, chills after injection Acupuncture M. abscessus, M. chelonae, M. nonchromogenicum Erythematous papules, nodules, ulcerative lesions, abscesses, confluent plaques, draining sinus tracts with discharge, wrist tenosynovitis Cardiac surgery M. peregrinum, M. fortuitum, M. fortuitum (third biovariant) complex, M. wolinskyi, M. goodii, M. abscessus Sternal wound infection, endocarditis Cosmetic surgery or other surgical procedures: liposuction, liposculpture,
face lift, breast lift (reduction augmentation), silicon injection M. fortuitum, M. chelonae, M. chelonae, M. porcinum, M. wolinskyi, M. goodii Erythema, tenderness, nodules, skin induration, subcutaneous or deep-tissue abscesses, fever, malaise, multiple abscesses along original suction tracts, draining sinus tracts, local pain, swelling Nipple piercing M. fortuitum, M. abscessus Asymptomatic nodules, tender nodules Implanted with prosthetic material M. abscessus, M. goodii Abscesses Pacemaker placement M. fortuitum, M. abscessus, M. wolinskyi Abscesses Peritoneal dialysis catheter M. abscessus Abscesses Laboratory Diagnosis Of all the currently described mycobacterial species, ≈60% have caused human diseases. For this reason, modern techniques for faster culture, identification, and drug susceptibility testing are urgently needed in mycobacteriology laboratories ( 22 , 25 ). In addition to the collection of high-quality specimens, timely diagnosis of NTM disease requires regular communication of clinical suspicion to the laboratory staff because optimal recover of some fastidious species requires additional tasks. Routine techniques include microscopy and culture; the latter should be performed by using both liquid and solid media incubated at different temperatures ( 22 ). Although optimal recovery for most clinically relevant mycobacteria is obtained at 35C°–37C°, some species (M. hemophilum, M. marinum, M. ulcerans and some species of RGM) require a lower incubation temperature to grow. For this reason, all clinical specimens that may harbor the above species (skin, synovial fluid, and bone) should be cultured at 28C°–30C° and at 35C°–37C°. Use of conventional biochemical and phenotypic tests for the identification of NTM is currently discouraged; more rapid and specific methods are favored, including high-performance liquid chromatography analysis of mycolic acids and commercial molecular assays. These may use either in-solution hybridization (Accuprobe, Gen-Probe Inc., San Diego, CA, USA) or solid-format reverse-hybridization assays (line probe assays) ( 22 ).Both techniques are specific, but the latter (in which amplification precedes hybridization) is more sensitive, enabling identification in the early stage of bacterial growth. Finally, gene (16S rDNA) sequencing is required for those species that cannot be identified by the above systems ( 22 ). Careful strategies should be recommended for using 16S rDNA sequence analysis databases because public databases may have wrong sequences and commercial ones tend to be underdeveloped and outdated ( 23 , 40 ). Conclusion Although NTM cause a broad spectrum of human disease, data on incidence of NTM infections are still lacking, mainly because of the absence of systematic epidemiologic studies, standard case definitions, and accurate mycobacterial identification. Furthermore, nonspecific clinical manifestations, lack of familiarity with these infections, and inadequate laboratory services make definitive diagnosis of NTM diseases often delayed or even impossible. Correlation of in vitro susceptibility testing with the clinical outcome, composition and duration of treatment regimens, and use of surgery or other therapeutic approaches are still undefined for most NTM species involved in human diseases. Laboratory research and multicenter controlled trials are needed to improve diagnosis and treatment of extrapulmonary NTM infections.
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                Contributors
                Journal
                J Clin Tuberc Other Mycobact Dis
                J Clin Tuberc Other Mycobact Dis
                Journal of Clinical Tuberculosis and Other Mycobacterial Diseases
                Elsevier
                2405-5794
                14 July 2021
                August 2021
                14 July 2021
                : 24
                : 100261
                Affiliations
                [a ]Wellcome-Wolfson Institute for Experimental Medicine, Queen’s University Belfast, Belfast, UK
                [b ]Department of Medical Microbiology, Belfast Health and Social Care Trust, Belfast, UK
                [c ]Gastroenterology Unit, Belfast Health and Social Care Trust, Belfast, UK
                [d ]Infectious Diseases Unit, Belfast Health and Social Care Trust, Belfast, UK
                Author notes
                [* ]Corresponding author at: Wellcome-Wolfson Institute for Experimental Medicine, School of Medicine, Dentistry and Biological Sciences, Queen’s University Belfast, 97 Lisburn Road, Belfast BT9 7BL, UK. t.shaw@ 123456qub.ac.uk
                Article
                S2405-5794(21)00050-4 100261
                10.1016/j.jctube.2021.100261
                8322297
                34355067
                3b0c8017-6a99-4151-8665-0eec056b20f1
                © 2021 The Authors

                This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

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                non-tuberculous mycobacteria,mycobacterium chelonae,extrapulmonary infection,tedizolid

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