文摘
A 63-year-old Caucasian taxi driver presented with a 3-week history of malaise, night sweats, 7 kg weight loss, generalized arthralgia, and persistent mid-lower abdominal pain. Blood inflammatory markers were raised, and a computed tomography scan demonstrated an irregular degeneration of the infrarenal aorta, with a differential diagnosis including aortic infection. An urgent type IV thoracoabdominal aneurysm repair was performed with a rifampicin-soaked aortic tube graft during an open procedure. No organisms were grown from multiple peripheral blood cultures or culture of the affected aorta. However, subsequent 16S ribosomal polymerase chain reaction analysis of the resected aorta identified Capnocytophaga canimorsus as the causative organism—a commensal that lives in the mouth of dogs and cats. The patient subsequently gave a history of multiple bites from his pet dog over recent months—the likely source of infection. He was treated with 8 weeks of intravenous antibiotics before switching to oral antibiotics for an additional 6 weeks.