SummaryA 19-year-old man presented with a 1.5-cm nodule on the first dorsal metacarpal ray. The patient denied having contact with fish tanks or fish, but recalled handling many reptiles without gloves in the vivarium where he worked. A culture of a skin biopsy specimen yielded Mycobacterium marinum. The clinical outcome was favourable after a 2-week course of intramuscular gentamicin (180mg daily) combined with a 6-week course of oral clarithromycin (500mg twice a day). Doctors should be aware that vivariums, in addition to fish tanks, can be sources of M. marinum exposure
Infections with Mycobacterium marinum are uncommon in children but should be considered by a physici...
Copyright © 2014 Shivani S. Patel et al.This is an open access article distributed under the Creativ...
Introduction: Mycobacterium marinum causes skin and soft tissue, bone and joint, and rare disseminat...
SummaryA 19-year-old man presented with a 1.5-cm nodule on the first dorsal metacarpal ray. The pati...
Mycobacterium marinum, the cause of chronic systemic infections in fish, occasionally causes granulo...
We identified 5 patients who had cutaneous lesions with cultures that yielded Mycobacterium marinum....
Mycobacterium marinum is a non-tuberculous photochromogenic mycobacterium, commonly responsible for ...
Mycobacterium marinum is a nontuberculous mycobacteria with worldwide distribution that lives in fre...
In the present study, 8 patients with soft tissue infection due to Mycobacterium marinum are describ...
The infection by Mycobacterium marinum in humans is relatively uncommon. When it occurs, it mainly a...
Background: Mycobacterium marinum is a human opportunistic pathogen that is known to inhabit swimmin...
Mycobacterium marinum lives in aquatic environments, where it causes disease in many poikilodermic ...
Five cases of Mycobacterium marinum skin infection in patients breeding exotic fish are reported. Le...
Mycobacterium marinum is a pathogenic organism normally found in aquaria and is the cause of fish tu...
INTRODUCTION: Mycobacterium marinum causes skin and soft tissue, bone and joint, and rare disseminat...
Infections with Mycobacterium marinum are uncommon in children but should be considered by a physici...
Copyright © 2014 Shivani S. Patel et al.This is an open access article distributed under the Creativ...
Introduction: Mycobacterium marinum causes skin and soft tissue, bone and joint, and rare disseminat...
SummaryA 19-year-old man presented with a 1.5-cm nodule on the first dorsal metacarpal ray. The pati...
Mycobacterium marinum, the cause of chronic systemic infections in fish, occasionally causes granulo...
We identified 5 patients who had cutaneous lesions with cultures that yielded Mycobacterium marinum....
Mycobacterium marinum is a non-tuberculous photochromogenic mycobacterium, commonly responsible for ...
Mycobacterium marinum is a nontuberculous mycobacteria with worldwide distribution that lives in fre...
In the present study, 8 patients with soft tissue infection due to Mycobacterium marinum are describ...
The infection by Mycobacterium marinum in humans is relatively uncommon. When it occurs, it mainly a...
Background: Mycobacterium marinum is a human opportunistic pathogen that is known to inhabit swimmin...
Mycobacterium marinum lives in aquatic environments, where it causes disease in many poikilodermic ...
Five cases of Mycobacterium marinum skin infection in patients breeding exotic fish are reported. Le...
Mycobacterium marinum is a pathogenic organism normally found in aquaria and is the cause of fish tu...
INTRODUCTION: Mycobacterium marinum causes skin and soft tissue, bone and joint, and rare disseminat...
Infections with Mycobacterium marinum are uncommon in children but should be considered by a physici...
Copyright © 2014 Shivani S. Patel et al.This is an open access article distributed under the Creativ...
Introduction: Mycobacterium marinum causes skin and soft tissue, bone and joint, and rare disseminat...