A 55-year-old man was admitted with symptoms of septic shock and started on broad spectrum antibiotics, which included piperacillin-tazobactam and vancomycin. A computerized tomography scan showed pneumoperitoneum, metastatic pancreatic adenocarcinoma, and a hepatic abscess that had eroded through the capsule. The abscess was treated by drain placement as the patient was deemed not a surgical candidate.
Blood cultures yielded the organism shown in the image below. The organism grew as β-hemolytic colonies on sheep blood agar. It did not grow on Thiosulfate-citrate-bile salts-sucrose (TCBS) agar. The organism tested oxidase- and indole-positive, and fermented glucose.
Which of the following is the most likely identity of the recovered organism?
Unlike Vibrio species, Aeromonas species do not grow on TCBS agar, making this agar useful in distinguishing Aeromonas from Vibrio. Enterobacteriaceae species ferments glucose and are indole positive but oxidase negative, which distinguishes it from Aeromonas. Listeria species are gram positive.
2Fernández-Bravo, A., & Figueras, M. J. (2020). An update on the genus Aeromonas: Taxonomy, epidemiology, and pathogenicity. Microorganisms, 8(1), 129. doi:10.3390/microorganisms8010129
1Janda, J. M., & Abbott, S. L. (2010). The genus Aeromonas: Taxonomy, pathogenicity, and infection. Clinical Microbiology Reviews, 23(1), 35-73. doi:10.1128/cmr.00039-09