Title: Clinical Case Conference
1Clinical Case Conference
- Clinical Case Conference
- May 8, 2006
- Robin Trotman, D.O.
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3Case 1
- 69 yo wf seen as an emergency consult for
dermatology for parasitosis. - CC Skin lesions and larvae crawling on her skin.
4Case 1
- HPI
- 5 mos ago her son dev. scabies.
- He was unsuccessfully treated in Aug.
- She presented to Derm clinic in Aug with possible
Scabies. - Treated with second course of Elimite and
cephalexin.
5Case 1
- HPI
- Return apt. to dermatology, entertained the dx of
delusional parasitosis. - Trial of pimozide, followed by haloperidol
- She did not tolerate these meds.
- She is referred to ID clinic for urgent apt per
dermatology attending.
6Case 1
- Hx obtained from pt., despite her son gray and
white specks that crawl out of my mouth at
night. - White larvae crawl out of her eyes and out of her
nose - Her brother is afflicted with similar ailment.
- She points at him and says look at him, he has
it too.
7Case 1
- Son is a minister and was an exterminator, he
conducted the remainder of the interview. - He has been treated with multiple courses of
scabies regimens. - He brings in a jar of small dead insects that
were disregarded when taken to the HD.
8Case 1
- Jar contained exoskeletons of multiple bugs.
Silverfish, dustballs, etc. - These were obtained from under her bed.
- She states that these emanate from her skin and
cause insatiable itching.
9Case 1
- ROS pruritis and her brother with Downs synd.
has the same complaints. - PMH Inflammatory muscle disorder, HTN, G5P4
- MEDS clonidine, methylpred,
- ALL nkma
10Case 1
- SOC HX caretaker for her brother who requires
much care, no tob, etoh, or drugs, lives in VA
currently and KS, IL, AZ in the past, no pets,
well water, no travel, no other family with
similar sx.
11Case 1
- PE170, 160/73076096.8
- Pleasant with constant interjections and
disruptions from her son. - Well healed, crusted, excoriations on ant tibia,
no other skin lesions seen - Nml remainder of exam.
- Exam of dead insects in the jar was unrevealing
12Case 1
- LABS punch biopsy at WFUBMC showed ulceration
secondary to excoriation.
13Case 1
- THE CATCH!
- Son states that this is obviously Colembola
infestation.
14Colmebo what?
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17Case 1
- Quick MEDLINE search revealed no referenced,
human, peer reviewed literature on this. - Environmental literature revealed that they live
in soil in which ivermectin is used. - I explained to them that her symptoms were not
consistent with any known human pathogen.
18Case 1
- Good cop vs bad cop.
- Successful and consensual diagnostic and
treatment plan. - CBC with diff, CMP, ivermectin 12mg X1
- F/U with PCP for referrals (did not want us to
refer for psychiatric eval.)
19Case 1
- Show of hands as to how many people have seen a
consult for infestation/delusional disorders.
20Delusional ParasitosisObjectives
- Differential diagnosis for infestation disease in
non-traveler. - Psychiatric disorders referred to ID specialists.
- -Conversion
- -Borderline
- -Factitious
- -Delusional (delusions of parasitosis)
21Delusional ParasitosisInfestation/Ectoparasitic
Infections
- Lice (Pediculosis)
- Pediculosis capitis- head lice - Pediculus
humanus var capitis - Pediculosis corporis- body lice - Pediculus
humanus var corporis - Pediculosis pubis- pubic lice - Phthirus pubis
22Delusional ParasitosisInfestation/Ectoparasitic
Infections
- Body louse and head louse are similar, 2-4mm,
elongated, with pointed heads - Eggs laid by fertilized female are glued to hairs
or clothing fibers. - Nymphs emerge 7 days later, molt 3 times, and
mate after 3 weeks. - Females lay up to 300 eggs and die
23Delusional ParasitosisInfestation/Ectoparasitic
Infections
- Nymphs and adults obtain blood meal by piercing
the skin, inject saliva, defecate. - Pruritic papules develop from hypersensitivity
reaction to saliva. - Lice can transmit
- R prowazekki (epidemic typhus)
- B quitana (trench fever)
- Borellia recurrentis (relapsing fever).
24Delusional ParasitosisInfestation/Ectoparasitic
Infections
Pubic louse
Head louse
-Look for other STIs -Check other hair
beds -Viable for 1 month on clothes -lt1cm
blue/gray macules on trunk maculae cerulae blue
spots
-Temporal/occipital scalp -Nits oval on base of
hair shafts -Body louse is seen in clothing, not
skin
25Delusional ParasitosisInfestation/Ectoparasitic
Infections
- Scabies itch mite, Sarcoptes scabei
- Obligate parasite, adult is .35mm in length
- Lay eggs in skin, molt in stratum corneum
- Intense pruritis, worse at night.
- Erythematous papules on intertriginous and
interdigital areas, wrists, ant. ax. folds,
groin.
26Delusional ParasitosisInfestation/Ectoparasitic
Infections
- Scabies diagnosis is made by skin scraping
- Scrape over papule with blade or cover slip
- Wet mount
27Delusional ParasitosisInfestation/Ectoparasitic
Infections
- Norwegian Scabies debilitated, immunosup,
institutionalized patients - Higher mite burden, secondary infection
28Delusional ParasitosisInfestation/Ectoparasitic
Infections
- Myiasis-Tumbu, botfly, horse or cattle botflies
- Sea lice (Fla, Caribbean)
- Bites-fleas, bedbugs, reduvid bus
- Chigger (harvest mites or redbugs)-scrub typhus
vector - Screwworms, Housefly, Lucilia spp. (greenbottle
flies) Wound myiasis
29Delusional ParasitosisPsychiatric disorders
presenting as infectious diseases
- Estimates of up to 1/3 of visits to dermatologist
involve psychological problems - Factitious fever in up to 10 of prolonged
outpatient FUOs. - Purely Pshychiatric or related conditions were
diagnosed in 4 of consults in ID referral
clinic. (next slide for list of dx.) - Multiple reports of iatrogenic harm from
investigations or treatments of these diseases. - Rebecca Wurtz. CID 199826924-32
30Delusional ParasitosisPsychiatric disorders
presenting as infectious diseases
- Factitious Disorder
- FD Munchausen Syndrome
- Malingering
- Phobia
- Veneroneurosis
- OCD
- Somatization disorder
- Hypochondriasis
- Conversion disorder
- Delusional disorder
- Physician facilitation Rebecca Wurtz. CID
199826924-32
31Delusional ParasitosisPsychiatric disorders
presenting as infectious diseases
- Factitious infection simulated illness, ie.
fever and infection. Can be up to 10 of FUOs. - Young adults with medical background
- Polymicrobial infections, undocumented fevers
- Factitious illness is its own DSM4 diagnosis
- TX is acknowledge the real stresses of the
situation, typically resist psychiatric eval
32Delusional ParasitosisPsychiatric disorders
presenting as infectious diseases
- Factitious Disorder Munchausen Syndrome
- The most refractory subset of FDs
- Wander from doc to doc saying they have HIV
- Distinuish from phobia of illness
- Refractory to behavior modifications
33Delusional ParasitosisPsychiatric disorders
presenting as infectious diseases
- Phobias Persistent fear of specific objects or
situations ie. HIV, TB, blood-injection-injury
subtype. - Not associated with rituals of OCD
- Often recognize the problem and will not resist
psychiatric referral
34Delusional ParasitosisPsychiatric disorders
presenting as infectious diseases
- Veneroneurosis Genitally focussed
hypochondriasis, syphililophobia - Will respond to structured programs to formalize
communication with their PCP and reevaluate their
symptoms and sensations.
35Delusional ParasitosisPsychiatric disorders
presenting as infectious diseases
- OCD Germophobia resultant in obsessions and
compulsions that cause distress, are time and
resource consuming, and interfere with
functioning. - Half of patients with OCD have contamination
obsessions and washing compulsions. - Can be referred from psychiatrist as part of
cognitive therapy - SSRIs may help
- Behavioral therapy
36Delusional ParasitosisPsychiatric disorders
presenting as infectious diseases
- Somatization Disorder Multiple unexplained
complaints, dx req. rigorous criteria - 4 pain symptoms-2 GI, 1 reproductive, 1
neurological and age lt30 yo. Sx for years - Much overlap with other psychiatric diagnoses
- Chronic fatigue Syndrome?
- Diagnosed as chronic brucellosis, chronic EBV,
systemic candidiasis, HHV6 - Avoid inpatient w/u and schedule routine visits
for reassurance
37Delusional ParasitosisPsychiatric disorders
presenting as infectious diseases
- Hypochondriasis preoccupation with fears of a
serious disease based on miinterretation of ones
own SS. - In same class of DSM4 disorders as somatoform.
- Can also blend with OCD
- Reassurance and scheduled educational visits
38Delusional ParasitosisPsychiatric disorders
presenting as infectious diseases
- Conversion Disorder Unconscious production of
symptoms to portray a serious illness - Generally neurological sx.
- NOT intentionally produced
- Focus is on the symptom in Conversion D/O rather
than the disease the disease as in hypochondriacs - Resist psychiatric referral
- The authoritative specialist may help
- Hypnosis may help
39Delusional ParasitosisPsychiatric disorders
presenting as infectious diseases
- Physician Facilitation Physician may not
recognize one the above disorders (chronic Lyme
Disease and in a patient from an area with no
endemic Lyme disease) - No thorough exam and evaluation
- Subject the patient to tests and therapies
- Reinforce the misconceptions or beliefs/delusions
40Delusional Disorder
41Delusional ParasitosisPsyhiatric disorders
- DSM4 definition of Delusional Parasitosis
- Non-bizarre delusion of the somatic type for over
one month. - Rule out effects of substance of another medical
condition.-formication, EtOH withdrawl. - Not due to schizophrenia
- Mean age 57, FgtM
- Matchbook sign-bag-o-scabs
- Wilson. Mayo Clinic Proc 2004791470
42Delusional ParasitosisPsyhiatric disorders
- Even more consistent with the DX is when the
delusion develops in another individual folie a
deux - family members are enlisted to believe the
psychotic belief. - Rarely seek psychiatric help, but rather a
dermatologist or ID doc. - DP involves the skin and soft tissues
- Wilson. Mayo Clinic Proc 2004791470
43Delusional Parasitosis
- DPEkboms Syndrome described in 1938
- DP is not a phobia of being infested with
parasites, rather a delusional condition - Aka monosymptomatic hypochondriacal psychosis,
psychogenic parasitosis - Typical presentation is with excoriations.
- Self-mutilation is not uncommon
44Delusional Parasitosis
- True infestation must be ruled out with skin
scrapings and biopsy - Empathetic listening
- Rule out medical cause. Ie. Lymphoma or a
systemic disorder causing pruritis. - Rule out substance abuse coccaine or amphetamine
- Some patients are receptive to definitive tests
that rule out infestation
45Delusional Parasitosis
- Shakable vs non-shakable beliefs
- If non-shakable, medical and neuropsychiatric
therapy required. - Pimozide was the standard of therapy after a
meta-analysis of 1223 pts showed 50 response
rate. Trabert. Psychopathology 199523238-46 - No controlled studies on pharmacotherapy.
- Pimozide causes prolongation of QT interval and
typical antipsychotics are avoided.
46Delusional Parasitosis
- Nicolato General Hospital Psychiatry
20062885-87 - 10 patient series 7 female, 3 male
- SX for mean 18 mos.
- Matchbox sign in only one
- Derm signs varied
- Only 5 were diagnosed with delusional only
- Schizophrenia (1), major depression(2), dementia
(2) - 3 had neuroimaging abnormalities
47Delusional Parasitosis
- Nicolato General Hospital Psychiatry
20062885-87 - Review of literature shows that social isolation
and female preponderance are the typical
features. - Favorable outcome of treatment in 60
48Delusional Parasitosis
- Meehan. Archives of Dermatology142352-355
- Series of three patients successfully treated
with olanzapine. - Pimozide causes prolongation of QT interval and
typical antipsychotics are avoided. - Tell the patient that there is no evidence of
infestation today.
49Delusional Parasitosis
- Summary
- Infectious Diseases consultant and primary care
givers must have these diseases in their
armamentarium - Index of suspicion based on characteristic
presentations and profiles - Referral when necessary and feasible
- Atypical antipsychotics may be used by
non-psychiatrists to treat delusions of
parasitosis once organic causes are ruled out.
50No. 7 Baseball sweeps series with 11-1 victory in
eight innings over Kansas and can clinch B12
title with one more conference win.
51Case 2
- 50 yo wf with poorly controlled DM admitted for
ab pain - Gastroenteritis one month prior, and for past 3
weeks has had LUQ pain and N/V/D - PCP 3 weeks ago diagnosed viral GE, same as her
grandchildren
52Case 2
- Seen in ED 4/30, labs, CT A/P.
- Large 10X5cm splenic cyst.
- Otherwise, her ED course was unremarkable and she
was d/cd home on ciprofloxacin - Pain increased and developed fever, chills,
rigors, confusion.
53Case 2
- Returns to ED on 5/5/06, with temp 102.
- Blood cultures from 4/30/06 now positive, a GPC.
- Admitted to ICU.
- ID consult called.
54Case 2
BXC grew?
55Case 2
- In anaerobic culture BCX
- Streptococcus constellatus
- 2/2 anaerobic and no aerobic, GMS pos, vanco
susc., catalase negative, Rapid ANA Kit for
rapid ID of anaerobes
56Case 2
- On admit, she was afebrile and nauseated and
complained of severe LUQ pain. - N/V/D resolved.
- ROS otherwise, negative
- No recent procedures or dental work
57Case 2
- PMH DM, HTN, Hyperlipid
- SOX HX lives near hanging rock, no travel,
homemaker, married, no tob, rtoh, drugs, inside
and outside dogs and cats, lived in NC, NJ, FL,
no sick contacts, no fam hx of IBD or ca.
58Case 2
- MEDS atenolol, Unasyn D0, ciprofloxacin D4
- NKMA
59Case 2
- PE Tm97.7, 140/80, 84,19
- Alert and in NAD, eating supper
- HEENT nml, missing several teeth but dentition
was in good repair, no LAN - CV/PULM reg, no murmur on HD1, but on HD2 there
was a SEM, early, loudest at RSB and into rt
neck, lungs were clear - ABobese, soft, tender to palp at LUQ with palp
spleen tip at left costal margin - Otherwise, PE was unremarkable, no stigmata of IE.
60Case 2
- LABS
- WBC 6.7, H/H9/27, PLTS167
- CMP nml except BUN/Cr 17/1.6
- BCX 2/2 with anaerobic bottles grew at 1.5 days
- Streptococcus constellatus, repeat BCX neg at 24h
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65Case 2
- Called on HD1 to see the patient.
- Tell me what you would recommend, Ill tell you
what I did.
66Case 2
- ID Doc recs
- 1. Triple vaccinate
- 2. Unasyn
- 3. Repeat BCX
- 4. Surgery consult
- 5. TTE, TEE, identify the source
- 6. Repeat CT at 7d after initial scan
- 7. Read about S. constellatus
67Case 2
- OBJECTIVES
- 1. Review S. milleri group-Very
confusing/inconsistent - -virulence factors
- 2. Etiology of BSI with S. constellatus
- -do you have to hunt for an abscess/tumor/source?
- 3. Mgt of splenic abscess
- -medical
- -perc drainage
- -surgical
68Streptococcus constellatusMicrobiology
- GroupStreptococcus angiosus Group. Aka
Streptococcus milleri group or S. intermedius
group. 3 species comprise this group - S. intermedius
- S. constellatus
- -subsp. constellatus
- -subsp. pharyngis
- S. angiosus
69Streptococcus constellatusMicrobiology Powderly
70Streptococcus constellatusMicrobiology
- Streptococcus angiosus Group all have a tendency
to cause invasive pyogenic infections. - Require CO2, not true anaerobes?
- Tiny strep colonies that smell like caramel on
BAP diagnostic? - Variable hemolysis-S. constellatus is beta
hemolytic - Lancefied gp F or C
- Biochemical tests distinguish this group from
other strep
71Streptococcus constellatusMicrobiology
- J Clin Microbiol. 2006441836-38
- Most labs report to the group level
- Able to identify more precisely with species
within the group using PCR - Biochemical and morphologic tests are not 100
reliable for species identification.
72Streptococcus constellatusMicrobiology
- ID is by viridans strep commercial kits.
- Considerable disagreement with S constellatus
- At most micro labs
- Bcx from BacT-alert, anaerobically incubated, pos
_at_ 2 days - GMS with GPC
- BAP innocuolated and show pin-point colonies at
high CO2/anaerbic environ - Catalase neg, vanc susc.
- Rapid-ANA kit to identify at the species level
73Streptococcus constellatusMicrobiology
- S. angiosus group-commensal in oral cavity
- Much literature from the periodontal literature
- S intermedius - detal plaques
- S angiosus in vaginal tract
- All species can inhabit the GI tract
74Streptococcus constellatusMicrobiology
Virulence factors
- This group grows well at low pH
- Abscess formation along with anaerobes that can
enhance growth of this group.(Eikenella) - Important in pulmonary infections
- Virulence factors like a adhensins allow binding
of things like fibrin and platelets-IE! - Capsule may protect from phagocytosis
- Hydrolytic enzymes like hyaluronidase allow pus
formation and tissue plane penetration
75Streptococcus constellatusMicrobiology
Virulence factors
- Superantigens-can super activate lymphocytes
without specificity and specific T cell
specificity - -Potent Th1 cytokine inducers
- Able to avoid or tolerate PMN ingestion
- Commensal organisms of the GI tract and are often
the sole agent causing intra-abdominal abscess
fromation. - Not able to find splenic abscess but other
visceral and solid organ infections are described
76Streptococcus constellatusMicrobiology
Virulence factors
- The use of metronidazole and gentamicin alone may
select for this group - S. constellatus and S. angiosus are the isolates
from this group recovered from ab infections. - S. intermedius is the most pathogenic (often sole
pathogen) - Silent colon cancer must be considered
- Viridans strep in neutropenic patients receiving
chemo, with more severe disease that in
non-neutropenic patients. - Chemo agents that ulcerate the GI tract
predispose patients to these infections
77Streptococcus constellatusClinical
characteristics
- Brain abscess and lung abscess. Case report and
discussion. CID 200030397-8 - Indian J Med Res 2004119(sup)167-7
- Case series of 28 patient with BSI
- 10 of sterp BSIs (c/w prev reports)
- 55 had intra-abdominal sepsis (no splenic
abscess) - S. constellatus was associated with abscess
78Streptococcus constellatusClinical
characteristics
- CID 2001321511-5
- Using 16s rRNA idenitified 118 SMG isolates
causing disease in Houston - Illness was described without knowledge of the
isolate/microbiology
79CID 2001321511-5
7/7 S. constellatus BSIs were assoc with
intra-abdminal process In 73 of isolates
obtained, S. constellatus was implicated as the
cause of an abscess 51 of SMG isolates were
from patients who has abscess as the presumed
source S. constellatus was often
polymicrobial S. intermedius was assoc with Head
and neck infections.
80Streptococcus constellatusTreatment
- PCN resistance has emerged and can be
transmitted, probably dynamic process - Aminoglycoside and beta-lactams demonstrate
synergy and can be used if there is intermediate
beta-lactam susceptibility - Vanco and clinda (studies below did not show
emergence of Clinda res. in SMG isolates) - Specied id may not govern susceptibility
- Tracy et al. AAC 2001451511-14 (same group
from Houston) - Whiley et al. AAC 199230243-4
81Streptococcus constellatusSummary
- S. constellatus is associated with abscess
formation and a source should be diligently
sought. - Identification of SMG, S. angiosus group, S.
milleri to the species level can be clinically
significant - Treatment and diagnostic workup should be guided
by the species within this group - However, antimicrobial susceptibility may not be
influenced by species id.
82Streptococcus constellatusSplenic Abscess?
- IE is the leading cause of splenic abscess, esp
in immunocompromised - Staph, Strep, Salmonella, E coli, fungal,
Mycobacteria - No cases of SMG
- Abx rarey curative
- Larger, loculated abscesses have high rates of
failure with perc drainage. - Mandell 6th ed.
83Streptococcus constellatusSplenic Abscess?
- What do we do with this pt if the surgeon does
not want to perform splenectomy?