A case series of brucellosis: A great mimicker


Case Series

Author Details : Sridevi Dinakaran, Sandhya Bhat*, Shashikala Nair, Prince Solomon, Nayyar Iqbal, Dilip Shankar Phansalkar

Volume : 11, Issue : 3, Year : 2024

Article Page : 222-226

https://doi.org/10.18231/j.ijmr.2024.040



Suggest article by email

Get Permission

Abstract

Brucellosis is a common zoonotic disease worldwide. Although it is commonly neglected in India, there are pockets where it is prevalent. The disease tends to involve multiple organs, mimicking other illnesses. The symptoms are fever, sweating, and musculoskeletal pain. In 40-70% of patients, musculoskeletal involvement is the most common systemic manifestation. Blood culture, serological tests, and PCR are the available test formats for diagnosing brucellosis. Automated blood culture methods enable earlier diagnosis of brucellosis when presenting as a case of Fever of unknown origin (FUO). Here, we present four cases of brucellosis in a nonendemic area. Of these, two cases presented as Brucella spondylodiscitis, mimicking TB spine, one as Brucella endocarditis, and the other as acute brucellosis. All four cases were diagnosed with microbiological and radiological diagnostic support and successfully treated as per standard treatment guidelines. The possibility of brucellosis as a differential diagnosis in patients with nonspecific symptoms affecting the bones and unexplained prolonged fever should be considered.
 

Keywords: Fever of unknown origin (FUO), Spondylodiscitis, Endocarditis, Automated Blood culture, Standard agglutination test (SAT), Brucellosis.


How to cite : Dinakaran S, Bhat S, Nair S, Solomon P, Iqbal N, Phansalkar D S, A case series of brucellosis: A great mimicker. Indian J Microbiol Res 2024;11(3):222-226


This is an Open Access (OA) journal, and articles are distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 License, which allows others to remix, tweak, and build upon the work non-commercially, as long as appropriate credit is given and the new creations are licensed under the identical terms.







Article History

Received : 06-07-2024

Accepted : 13-08-2024


View Article

PDF File   Full Text Article


Copyright permission

Get article permission for commercial use

Downlaod

PDF File   XML File   ePub File


Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

Article DOI

https://doi.org/ 10.18231/j.ijmr.2024.040


Article Metrics






Article Access statistics

Viewed: 538

PDF Downloaded: 86