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A case of <i>Capnocytophaga canis</i> sepsis due to a cat bite
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- NOGAMI Ayako
- Department of Clinical Laboratory, Iida Municipal Hospital
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- JITSUHARA Masaaki
- Department of Clinical Laboratory, Iida Municipal Hospital
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- MIMURA Naomi
- Department of Clinical Laboratory, Iida Municipal Hospital
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- SHIMOJIMA Yoshio
- Department of Neurology, Iida Municipal Hospital
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- TSUKADAIRA Akihiro
- Department of General Medicine, Iida Municipal Hospital
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- SUZUKI Michio
- Department of Veterinary Science, National Institute of Infectious Disease
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- IMAOKA Koichi
- Department of Veterinary Science, National Institute of Infectious Disease
Bibliographic Information
- Other Title
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- ネコ咬傷による<i>Capnocytophaga canis</i>敗血症の1例
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Description
<p>We report a case of sepsis due to Capnocytophaga canis, which was reported to be a novel species of the Capnocytophaga genus in 2016. A 67-year-old female with a medical history of splenectomy was admitted to our hospital with fever and general malaise. Her fever lasted three days from the day after a cat bit her both hands, and her laboratory data and physical examination on admission showed sepsis and disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC). Only anaerobic bottles of blood culture were positive 24 h after the start of culture, and various sizes of Gram-negative bacilli having sharp ends were observed in the smear of anaerobic blood culture fluid. The strain grew over 4 days after starting the cultivation with subcultures, and it was identified as Capnocytophaga canimorsus using a biochemical identification kit (identification probability, 99%).On the other hand, in nucleotide sequence analysis, the 16S rRNA and gyrB gene sequences of the present strain showed relatively low identities (96.9% and 75.5%, respectively) to the C. canimorsus type strain (ATCC 35979). In contrast, the sequences of 16S rRNA and the gyrB gene showed extremely high identities of 99.8% and 99.5% between the present strain and the C. canis type strain (LMG 29146), respectively. C. canis is considered to be a low-pathogenicity bacterium isolated from the oral cavity of dogs in previous reports, but our case showed severe sepsis due to C. canis following a cat bite.</p>
Journal
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- Japanese Journal of Medical Technology
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Japanese Journal of Medical Technology 66 (6), 703-708, 2017
Japanese Association of Medical Technologists
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Details 詳細情報について
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- CRID
- 1390001205741585536
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- NII Article ID
- 130006234083
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- ISSN
- 21885346
- 09158669
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- Text Lang
- ja
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- Article Type
- journal article
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- Data Source
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- JaLC
- CiNii Articles
- KAKEN
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- Abstract License Flag
- Disallowed