Disseminated Rothia kristinae Infection: A Case Highlighting an Emerging Pathogen
Kody Dormire, Sravani Kamatam, Moni Roy, Sharjeel Ahmad

TL;DR
This paper presents a case of widespread Rothia kristinae infection, highlighting its potential to cause severe disease and the need for early treatment.
Contribution
The paper contributes a detailed clinical case highlighting Rothia kristinae as an emerging pathogen with disseminated infection potential.
Findings
Rothia kristinae caused native aortic valve endocarditis, discitis, and septic arthritis in a 70-year-old woman.
The infection required prolonged antibiotic treatment and surgical intervention.
The case underscores the pathogenic potential of Rothia kristinae and the importance of early clinical suspicion.
Abstract
Rothia kristinae is usually found in the environment, on normal skin and mucosal surfaces of humans, and there is a limited medical literature available on this organism and its pathogenicity. Our case describes a woman in her early 70’s with left hip osteoarthritis presented with generalized weakness, fever, and altered mentation associated with left hip and back pain. Laboratory workup was significant for leukocytosis and elevated inflammatory markers. Blood culture demonstrated Gram‐positive cocci, later identified as Rothia kristinae. She was subsequently diagnosed with native aortic valve endocarditis, multilevel discitis, and left hip septic arthritis. She completed 2 weeks of intravenous vancomycin. Treatment was complicated by a drug reaction to vancomycin and switched to linezolid. She developed a left hip abscess and underwent left hip arthroplasty. Follow‐up transthoracic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDiphtheria, Corynebacterium, and Tetanus · Intramuscular injections and effects · Mycobacterium research and diagnosis
