Cladophialophora bantiana, a dematiaceous fungus, is an uncommon pathogenic organism originally thought to more commonly affect immunocompetent patients. Increasing numbers of reports, however, describe the organism affecting immunocompromised patients. Like all dematiaceous fungi, Cladophialophora can be recognized in histopathologic sections by the golden-brown coloration in the walls of the hyphae. Of all the dematiaceous fungi, Cladophialophora bantiana demonstrates the most neurotropism, which is responsible for increasing recognition of this fungus as the causative agent in brain abscesses in transplant patients. We describe one patient with a liver transplant and another with a double lung transplant, both of whom developed cerebral abscesses caused by this organism, and review the reported literature.
Cutibacterium acnes is the most common bacterium associated with periprosthetic shoulder infections. Sequencing of C. acnes has been proposed as a potential rapid diagnostic tool and a method of determining subtypes associated with pathogenicity and antibiotic resistance patterns. When multiple deep samples from the same surgery are culture positive for the same species and the isolates show the same culture phenotype, it is typically assumed that these isolates are clonal. However, it is well-known that C. acnes is not clonal on the skin of most individuals. We hypothesized that the C. acnes bacteria recovered at the time of revision shoulder arthroplasty would often represent more than one subtype, and we tested this hypothesis in this work. For patients undergoing revision shoulder arthroplasty, multiple samples from the surgical field were taken. For those patients with multiple samples that were culture positive for C. acnes, isolates from each sample were subjected to full genome sequencing. Of 11 patients, 5 (45%) had different subtypes of C. acnes within the deep tissues even though the colony morphology was similar. One patient had four subtypes in the deep tissues, while four patients had two different subtypes. Up to four different subtypes of C. acnes were observed in the deep tissues of a single patient. Clonality of C. acnes isolates from deep specimens from a potential periprosthetic shoulder infection cannot be assumed. Sequence-based characterization of virulence and antibiotic resistance may require testing of multiple deep specimens.
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