Breast abscess with lethal septicemia due to Pseudomonas aeruginosa in a patient with AIDS.
Anahtar kelimeler
Öz
OBJECTIVE
The incidence of Pseudomonas aeruginosa in HIV-infected patients has increased over the last years. We describe a case of pseudomonal breast abscess complicated with fatal septicemia in an AIDS patient.
METHODS
A 21-year-old woman was admitted for fever, chills, nausea, vomiting and pain in the breast. She had a swelling in the right breast of 3 days duration. HIV infection had been confirmed 6 years earlier. CD4 count was 2/mm3. Surgical drainage produced a blue-green purulent discharge which grew Pseudomonas aeruginosa on culture. Despite cloxacilin, then ceftazidime and amikacin, initial improvement was followed 2 weeks later by nodular pulmonary infiltration with cavitation. P. aeruginosa was recovered from sputum and blood cultures, but stepwise resistance developed and the patient died 3 months after admission.
CONCLUSIONS
Breast abscesses are infrequent in nonlactating women. P. aeruginosa is rarely involved, even in HIV patients. Due to the risk of resistance, prompt administration of appropriate antibiotics is required.