“…Although it is an infrequent human pathogen, it has been reported as a causal agent in bacteremia, endocarditis, respiratory tract infection, central nervous system infection, ophthalmologic infection, urinary tract infection, gastrointestinal infection, skin, soft tissue, bone and joint infections (2-4, 13). Potential risk factors for infection of S. maltophilia are malignancies (5), prior therapy with broad-spectrum antibiotics (6), chronic respiratory disease (6), prolonged endotracheal intubation (4,6), and indwelling vascular catheters (14).…”