2019
DOI: 10.1177/0890334419862214
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Mammary Dysbiosis and Nipple Blebs Treated With Intravenous Daptomycin and Dalbavancin

Abstract: Introduction Mammary dysbiosis, also known as subacute mastitis, may be associated with nipple blebs. These overlapping diagnoses represent a challenging clinical scenario during lactation. Little research has been published on etiology, management strategies, and outcomes of these concurrent diagnoses. Main issue We document the treatment and outcome of a patient who presented with left-breast dysbiosis and nipple blebs and whose milk culture grew multi-drug-resistant, methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aur… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…Proponents of the diagnosis of subacute mastitis or mammary dysbiosis apply the pathogenic microbiota model of breast inflammation to hypothesize that bacterial overgrowth or mammary dysbiosis creates sticky milk or biofilm, which causes plugging of ducts, indurated painful areas, decreased milk synthesis, pain with latch, and increased risk of mastitis. [87][88][89] Subacute mastitis or mammary dysbiosis has also been characterized as an inflammatory condition, which does not present with systemic illness or localized breast erythema. 90 Signs and symptoms attributed to subacute mastitis or mammary dysbiosis are detailed in Table 7.…”
Section: What Is Subacute Mastitis or Mammary Dysbiosis?mentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Proponents of the diagnosis of subacute mastitis or mammary dysbiosis apply the pathogenic microbiota model of breast inflammation to hypothesize that bacterial overgrowth or mammary dysbiosis creates sticky milk or biofilm, which causes plugging of ducts, indurated painful areas, decreased milk synthesis, pain with latch, and increased risk of mastitis. [87][88][89] Subacute mastitis or mammary dysbiosis has also been characterized as an inflammatory condition, which does not present with systemic illness or localized breast erythema. 90 Signs and symptoms attributed to subacute mastitis or mammary dysbiosis are detailed in Table 7.…”
Section: What Is Subacute Mastitis or Mammary Dysbiosis?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Because of hypothesized bacterial biofilm formation, 2-6 weeks of treatment with antibiotics is typically recommended (cephalosporin, amoxicillin/clavulanate, or dicloxacillin, or erythromycin). 68,72,78,88,91 Some clinicians also hypothesize that women with symptoms of mammary dysbiosis are more likely to develop nipple blebs or white spots, proposing that white spots are distal extensions of biofilm. 72,87,88 The third article of this series also contests this pathogenic bacterial or biofilm hypothesis concerning aetiology of white spots.…”
Section: What Is Subacute Mastitis or Mammary Dysbiosis?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Mitchell et al hypothesize that white spots result from subacute mastitis and mammary dysbiosis, in which ductal biofilm formation extends to the nipple epithelium ( Box 6 ). 79 , 80 Their hypothesis builds on the 2017 Rodriguez and Fernandez hypothesis that breast inflammation results from biofilm blockages within lactiferous ducts. 81 …”
Section: Classification: Signs and Symptoms Of Excessively High Stret...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this analysis, the authors hypothesized that milk blebs are a surface extension of intra-ductal mammary dysbiosis and plugging caused by biofilm formation. 79 Mitchell et al propose that dysbiosis extends superficially to dissect the duct at the nipple orifice, resulting in growth of epidermal tissue over the orifice. (See the second article in this series for a critique of the diagnosis of mammary dysbiosis.…”
Section: Lactation-related White Spotsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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