When good bacteria behave badly: a case report of Bacillus clausii sepsis in an immunocompetant adult
Isabella Princess, Thillainathan Natarajan, Siddhartha Ghosh
Abstract
Reports of unusual microorganisms causing human infections are on the rise due to transitions in epidemiological trends. Commensal/normal flora which are otherwise termed as 'good bacteria' are now causing infections in different group of patients, mostly immunocompromised individuals. Various host and environmental factors play a pivotal role in microbial transmigration from their normal habitat into the blood and other body sites. We report one such 'good bacterium' associated with sepsis in a patient who was given the same bacterium in the form of probiotics.
Topics & Concepts
Flora (microbiology)BacteriaSepsisBacillus (shape)BiologyMicrobiologyMicroorganismEcologyImmunologyGeneticsBacterial Identification and Susceptibility TestingAntibiotic Resistance in BacteriaAntimicrobial Resistance in Staphylococcus