2000
DOI: 10.1177/089686080002000638
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Campylobacter jejuni Bacteremia, Peritonitis, and Exacerbation of Chronic Pancreatitis in a Patient on CAPD: Case Report and Literature Review

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Cited by 5 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…The most commonly implicated species is C. jejuni (60%), followed by C. fetus (20%). Diarrhea was reported in 76% of cases of CP, which is similar to the figure reported in a previous literature review (19). Campylobacter jejuni was the most commonly involved pathogen, not only in diarrhea-positive (60%) but also in diarrhea-negative cases (66%).…”
Section: Literature Reviewsupporting
confidence: 87%
“…The most commonly implicated species is C. jejuni (60%), followed by C. fetus (20%). Diarrhea was reported in 76% of cases of CP, which is similar to the figure reported in a previous literature review (19). Campylobacter jejuni was the most commonly involved pathogen, not only in diarrhea-positive (60%) but also in diarrhea-negative cases (66%).…”
Section: Literature Reviewsupporting
confidence: 87%
“…Of note, about 60% of Campylobacter peritonitis was preceded by, or concomitant with, acute diarrhea in one review (33), and in all three cases in a recent publication (34). PD related Campylobacter peritonitis is most likely transmitted via bad hand hygiene or transmural bowel contamination (33,35). Bacteriemic spread is also possible, with three such cases in a series of 16 (33) and, more recently, in a single case report (35).…”
Section: Infectious Organisms Shared By Animals and Humansmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…Direct contact with animals, especially puppies, may also lead to the infection, although it has not been reported for PD peritonitis. Of note, about 60% of Campylobacter peritonitis was preceded by, or concomitant with, acute diarrhea in one review (33), and in all three cases in a recent publication (34). PD related Campylobacter peritonitis is most likely transmitted via bad hand hygiene or transmural bowel contamination (33,35).…”
Section: Infectious Organisms Shared By Animals and Humansmentioning
confidence: 93%
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“…In other words, we observed a much less favorable response of Campylobacter peritonitis to cefazolin than was reported by Elshafie et al (9), whose 3 cases of Campylobacter peritonitis were all susceptible to cefazolin (9). Earlier studies have reported effective regimes including cefazolin (9), erythromycin plus tobramycin (13), clarithromycin (14), imipenem (15), meropenem (16), gentamicin plus ciprofloxacin (17), vancomycin plus norfloxacin (18), vancomycin plus netilmicin and ciprofloxacin (19), and vancomycin plus gentamicin (20). Interestingly, all 6 patients who failed to respond by day 5 in our series (Table 3) improved after administration of an oral macrolide (erythromycin or clarithromycin); 5 achieved a complete cure, and 1 patient experienced relapse of culture-negative peritonitis.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%