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. 2015 Jan 23;53(2):713–715. doi: 10.1128/JCM.02349-14

TABLE 2.

Thirty-four cases of C. upsaliensis infection from previous reportsa

Age (yrs or as indicated) Sex Underlying disease Clinical presentation Reference
Hemolytic uremic syndrome 16
4 Guillain-Barré syndrome 17
64 M Guillain-Barré syndrome 18
83 M CHF, CRF, COPD Bacteremia 14
10 (mo) M None Bacteremia 14
20 M None Enteritis 14
72 M CRF Peritonitis 14
35 F AML Enteritis 14
6 (mo) M None URI, erythematous tympanic membranes 14
38 M AIDS Bacteremia 14
1 M URI Enteritis 14
80 F Glioblastoma Bacteremia 14
25 F REP Bacteremia 14
64 M LC Bacteremia 14
11 F None Enteritis 12
36 M Alcohol syndrome Pneumonia 12
30 F None Burn 12
4 F None Enteritis 12
6 M Anorexia Enteritis 12
9 M Kwashiorkor Bacteremia 12
13 F None Enteritis 12
9 M Anemia Pneumonia 12
7 F Myocarditis Bacteremia 12
6 M None Enteritis 12
18 M Kwashiorkor Bacteremia 12
27 M Kwashiorkor Enteritis 12
10 F Underweight for age Enteritis 12
12 M None Enteritis 12
2 F Kwashiorkor Enteritis 12
18 F Kwashiorkor Bacteremia 12
46 F None Breast abscess 19
26 F None Abortion 9
24 M Knee arthroplasty Prosthetic knee infection 15
83 M IBS Persistent bloody diarrhea 5
70 M UC, TC, CS Severe sepsis This report
a

—: unknown; M, male; F, female; CHF, congestive heart failure; CRF, chronic renal insufficiency; COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; AML, acute myeloid leukemia; URI, upper respiratory illness; REP, ruptured ectopic pregnancy; LC, liver cirrhosis; IBS, irritable bowel syndrome; UC, ureteral cancer; TC, thyroid cancer; CS, Cushing's syndrome.