Annals of Clinical Microbiology and Antimicrobials Open Access Fatal Bacteremia Due to Immotile Vibrio Cholerae Serogroup O21 in Vientiane, Laos – a Case Report

Background: Human infections with non-O1, non-O139 V. cholerae have been described from Laos. Elsewhere, non cholera-toxin producing, non-O1, non-O139 V. cholerae have been described from blood cultures and ascitic fluid, although they are exceedingly rare isolates.


Case Presentation
In January 2006, a 20 year old female rice farmer, from Nayxaythong District, on the outskirts of Vientiane City, was admitted to Mahosot Hospital, Vientiane, Lao PDR (Laos) with a 7 day history of abdominal pain, fever, rigors, watery diarrhoea, yellow eyes, leg oedema, anuria and malaena. She had collected many apple snails 'hoy pak kwang' (Pomacea canaliculata) and mussels 'hoy kee' (Ligumia species) from the mud on the edge of a nearby lake and washed them before boiling them for 30 minutes. She ate partially cooked snails as she boiled them and became unwell 7 days later. The fully cooked snails were eaten, with chilli sauce, by another villager who remained well. On admission she was had a fever (39.5°C) with jaundice, abdominal tenderness, splenomegaly, tachycardia, shortness of breath, lower leg oedema and ascites. She had no skin lesions and had no evidence for prior cirrhosis, antacid or steroid use, gastric surgery or haemoglobinopathy. Her haematocrit was 35%, with a peripheral white cell count of 8.9 10 9 /L (66% neutrophils). Serum creatinine, alkaline phosphatase and glucose were within the reference ranges, with raised total serum bilirubin 41 μmol/L (reference <14.5 μmol/L), AST 75 IU/L (<37 IU/L) and ALT 170 IU/L (<40 IU/L). Abdominal ultrasound demonstrated ascites and splenomegaly with normal liver and kidneys. Stool was not cultured. She was treated empirically with intravenous ampicillin, gentamicin and diuretics. Analysis of tapped ascitic fluid revealed many white cells, 90% of which were neutrophils.
Oxidase positive, curved, non-motile Gram negative rods were grown from 2 of 2 blood cultures, after 2 days incubation and the ascitic fluid, after 1 day of incubation. API 20E (bioMeriuex, France) identified Vibrio cholerae with 99.9% confidence. The organism grew in 0% sodium chloride but not in 6% or 10% sodium chloride and did not agglutinate when tested against O1 and O139 antisera, but did against O21 antisera (Department of Bacteriology, National Institute of Infectious Disease in Tokyo, Japan). By disc diffusion testing (Kerby-Bauer, according to NCCLS guidelines 2003) the organisms were susceptible to ampicillin, ciprofloxacin, ceftriaxone and tetracycline. She was taken home moribund, at her relatives' request, after 2 days in hospital and died soon afterwards.
In order to investigate whether we could grow 021 V. cholerae from the probable source of infection, in May 2006 specimens of P. canaliculata and Ligumi species were collected from the same lake as above and cultured in TCBS according to the methods of Ottaviani et al. [15]. No V. cholerae were grown but Aeromonas, Enterobacter, Proteus and Escherichia species were identified.
The PCR techniques of Nandi et al. [16] were used to confirm that the organisms contained the outer membrane protein W (ompW) and regulatory protein (toxR) of Vibrio cholerae and to determine whether they contained cholera toxin (ctxA) and toxin-coregulated pilus (TCP) virulence genes (Table 1 &2). The bacteria from blood culture and ascitic fluid were re-plated on Modified Drigalski Agar (BTB agar, Eiken Kagaku Co Ltd, Tokyo, Japan) to obtain pure growth and DNA extraction was performed (Wizard, A1120, Promega, WI, USA). Biotype Classic O1 Inaba strain 569B and Vibrio cholerae O21, recovered from a patient with diarrhoea in Vientiane Capital, were used as positive control and reference strains, respectively and compared with human isolates of serogroup O21 109-68 from India (from diarrhoeal stool), and environmental isolate 418-03 from the USA (seawater, Chesapeake Bay, Virginia) (both from National Institute of Infectious Diseases (NIID) Tokyo). Primers of Outer membrane protein W (ompW) were prepared according to [16] and outer membrane protein U (ompU), outer membrane protein K (ompK), toxin-coregulated pilus (TCP), cholerae toxin A (ctxA) and Regulatory protein (toxR) primers were designed ( Table 2) and DNA amplification performed (icycler, BioRad) with analysis using 1.8% agarose gel electrophoresis. V. cholerae O21 cultures from both blood and ascitic fluid from our patient and 109-68 and 418-03 had ompW and toxR gene regions, confirming them to be V. cholerae [16], but had no ctxA, ompU, omp K, TCP gene regions, which were present in the Classic 569B strain ( Figure 1, Table 1). Scanning electron microscopy (SEM; S-5200, Hitachi, Japan) of the patient's isolate, serogroup O21 109-68 and 418-03 (Figures 2, 3, 4) demonstrated that, although 109-68 and 418-03 did possess flagellae, the organisms isolated from the patient did not. The flagellin regulation gene flaA was demonstrated by PCR in the patient's isolates and 569B with specific oligonucleotide primers (Table 3), which we designed based on the work of Klose and Mekalanos [17] who demonstrated that immotility could be caused by mutations in the flaA gene alone.
The 021 V. cholerae cultured from blood and ascitic fluid of our patient were non-motile. V. cholerae are normally motile, although non-motile variants of Classical O1 may arise in the laboratory [17,18] and non-01 non-motile Agarose gel electrophoresis analysis of V. cholerae from patient's ascitic fluid culture and blood culture isolates, 109-68, 418-02 and 569B Figure 1 Agarose gel electrophoresis analysis of V. cholerae from patient's ascitic fluid culture and blood culture isolates, 109-68, 418-02 and 569B. Lane M is the 100 bp lambda ladder marker (Toyobo, Japan); lanes 1-4 are ompW (the primer pairs 1/2, 1/4, 2/4, F/R) and lanes 5-9 are toxR, ctxA, ompU, ompK and TCP. clinical isolates have been described [19]. The combination of SEM and PCR demonstrated that the organisms lacked flagellae but did possess the important regulatory flagellin gene flaA on the genome. The underlying reasons for the absence of flagellae in the patient's isolates are being investigated.
Non-01 V. cholerae bacteremia has been described from Thailand [9,20] and recently from Laos (Phouthavane et al. unpublished). Our patient may have contracted the infection from the molluscs or from injuries whilst walking barefoot on the edge of the lake. An association between V. cholerae and non-biting chironomid midges (Diptera; Chironomidae) egg masses, which live in fresh water, has been described [21] and such midges may be important in the ecology of cholera. The collection and consumption of snails are an important part of life in Laos, as in rural communities in Australia and USA where non O1 V. cholerae bacteremia has been described amongst people who fish [22]. V. cholerae are usually associated with water of medium salinity as it requires trace amounts of sodium chloride for growth but it can be contracted from fresh water environments [4,8]. Although non-01 and non-0139 V. cholerae are not usually associated with epidemics, in Bangladesh non-01 V. cholerae has caused outbreaks [23]. The optimum treatment remains uncertain but third generation cephalosporins, doxycycline and fluoroquinolones have been suggested [3].

Conclusion
Fatal bacteremic non-O1, non-O139 V. cholerae is reported from Laos. The organisms were unusual in being non-motile. They did however possess the Vibrio flagellin flaA gene. Further research on the determinants of the non-motility is required. Given the importance of fishing and water in Lao society and the high prevalence of cirrhosis secondary to hepatitis B and C infection [24], V. cholerae non-01 bacteraemia may be a more important disease than this case report suggests.

Competing interests
The authors declare that they have no competing interests.