Citrobacter koseri
Citrobacter koseri, formerly known as Citrobacter diversus, is a Gram-negative non-spore forming, rod-shaped bacterium. It is a facultative anaerobe capable of aerobic respiration. It is motile via peritrichous flagella. It is a member of the family of Enterobacteriaceae. The members of this family are part of the normal flora and commonly found in the digestive tracts of humans and animals. C. koseri may act as an opportunistic pathogen in individuals who are immunocompromised.
It rarely is community-acquired and mainly occurs as hospital-acquired infections. Infections caused by C. koseri can lead to various symptoms, including fever, chills, diarrhea, and abdominal pain. In severe cases, the bacterium can cause sepsis, meningitis, or brain abscesses. Brain abscesses have a high rate of mortality and complications, particularly in neonates. The transmission of C. koseri could be vertical from mother to fetus, and other sources can be horizontal by asymptomatic nursery staff.
Signs and symptoms
Neonates infected with C. koseri usually present with sepsis, meningitis, seizures, apnea, and a bulging fontanelle. No evidence of a stiff neck or high-grade fever is present.Complications
Occasionally, it causes meningitis, but it can cause sepsis and ventriculitis.Arterial and venous infarctions are possible because of the bacterial infiltration along the main vessel; exudates within the ventricles and ventriculitis may obstruct the ventricular foramina and result in multicystic hydrocephalus with consequent long-lasting shunting difficulties and necrotizing meningoencephalitis with pneumocephalus has been reported.
Pathogenicity
The pathogenic mechanism is poorly understood. C. koseri may uniquely penetrate, survive, and replicate into vascular endothelial cells and macrophages. Furthermore, it survives in phagolysosomal fusion and replicates within macrophages, which may contribute to the establishment of chronic abscesses.Diagnosis
Medical imaging
Early and massive tissue necrosis is a specific feature of C. koseri brain infection. The early stage of the disease predominates in the white matter, causing cerebritis; the later stage is marked with necrotic cavities in multiple locations. The cavities are initially square and not tense, but when pus forms and collects in these cavities, they tend to become more rounded; a persisting cavity leads to septated ventriculitis that may result in multicystic hydrocephalus.Early cerebritis is seen, and multiple large cavities can be seen in the late stage of the disease; abscesses formation, contraction of the cavities, and hydrocephalus due to ventriculitis are observed in the late follow-up.