In the fall of 2020, a 77-year-old man in Florida realized he had gotten one of the worst gifts imaginable—one that kept on giving.
According to a case report published in this month's issue of Emerging Infectious Diseases, the man showed up at a Gainesville hospital with chest pain that just wouldn't go away. For nearly two years prior, the man—a pastor living on a rural farm with dogs and goats—had been in and out of hospitals and on and off of various antibiotics.
Generally, the man wasn't in the best health. His medical history included Type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, and heart failure with reduced ejection fraction. For the latter, he had an automated implantable cardiac defibrillator (AICD) placed—and it was not his first. The man had a notable history of having gone through multiple defibrillators and revisions, including getting a new generator in 2018. Some possible reasons for such a history could include heavy use of the device and infections.
Throughout his hospital visits in 2019 and 2020, doctors suspected he had an infection lurking in his heart implant. But the germ behind it remained elusive. When they tried to isolate whatever bacteria, fungi, or other pathogen was causing the problem, they couldn't find anything. He was subsequently treated for a "culture-negative" infection. At one point, a test suggested a rare, opportunistic bacterium. But, after treatments with over half a dozen antibiotics for mostly two- to four-week spans over the two years, the discomfort in the left side of his chest would always return.
Hog-wild infection
During the fall 2020 visit, doctors finally rooted out the source of the problem. Blood culture tests showed clumps of some kind of bacteria among his blood cells. Imaging, meanwhile, showed signs of infection around his implant. The doctors were concerned enough that they decided it was time to take the implant out. After removing it, they sent the device and samples to the Florida health department and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which did clinical and genetic testing. They all turned up Brucella suis.