Summary
Actinomycosis is an infection caused by Actinomyces bacteria (especially Actinomyces israelii), which is ubiquitous in the oral cavity and is sometimes found in the gut or female genital tract. Actinomyces thrives in anaerobic environments, which are created by the proliferation of oxygen-consuming aerobic bacteria. The most frequent form of infection is cervicofacial actinomycosis, which occurs after injury to the oral cavity, face, or neck, although Actinomyces infection may also affect other parts of the body. The initial disease manifests as coarse, inflammatory nodules, which frequently develop into purulent, draining fistulae. Imaging enables a tentative diagnosis, but definitive diagnosis is based on culture and microscopic identification of Actinomyces. Antibiotics are used to treat actinomycosis and, in severe cases, surgery is required to remove lesions. Untreated cases of actinomycosis result in chronic, progressive disease.
Epidemiology
Etiology
Pathogen
- Actinomyces are primarily anaerobic, gram-positive, non-acid fast, branching, rod-shaped bacteria.
- Actinomyces bacteria, particularly Actinomyces israelii, are found in the normal oral flora.
Predisposing factors
-
Cervicofacial actinomycosis (most frequent form of actinomycosis)
- Poor dental hygiene (e.g., dental caries)
- Oral surgery (e.g., tooth extraction)
- Maxillofacial trauma
- Local tissue inflammation (e.g., tonsillitis, tumor)
- Comorbidities (e.g., diabetes)
-
Abdominal and pelvic actinomycosis
- Intestinal surgery
- Foreign body ingestion
- Tumor
- Ascending infection from the uterus, associated with intra-uterine contraceptive devices
-
Thoracic actinomycosis
- History of aspiration
- Recent oral infection
- Ongoing pulmonary malignancy (see “Aspiration pneumonia”)
References:[2][3]
Pathophysiology
Actinomyces is part of the normal flora of the oral cavity (less common in the lower gastrointestinal tract and female genital tract).
- Mucosal injury (e.g., local trauma or surgery) → coexisting aerobic bacteria create an optimal anaerobic environment → proliferation of Actinomyces → purulent, contiguous inflammation → formation of coarse granulation tissue and necrotic inclusions → possible fistula development
- The neck, face, abdomen, pelvic, and lungs are the most common manifestations, although other locations are possible.
Actinomycosis infection spreads contiguously, with no regard for anatomical borders, and develops into multiple draining fistulae.
References:[4]
Clinical features
-
Cervicofacial actinomycosis
- Slowly progressive mass in the neck and/or face; most commonly in the mandible region
- Usually painless nodular lesions
- Becomes indurated with purulent discharge that contains sulfur granules: from fistulae and draining sinus tracts. [3]
- Canaliculitis: affects the lacrimal ducts or mouth, typically in the perimandibular region [2]
-
Abdominal and pelvic actinomycosis
- Fever, abdominal discomfort, changes in bowel habits
- Possible pathological vaginal bleeding or discharge
-
Thoracic actinomycosis
- Cough, chest pain
- Possible hemoptysis with yellow granules
- Constitutional symptoms: fatigue, weight loss, malaise
Diagnostics
Suspected cases based on the clinical presentation (e.g., presence of sulfur granules) can be confirmed via identification of the organism from tissue specimen (e.g., pus, biopsy tissue from suspected lesion) or sulfur granules.
- Culture (confirmatory test)
- Microscopy: direct visualization and staining of specimen → accumulations of radially protruding and branching Actinomyces (conglomerates with a “cauliflower-like” appearance) that are surrounded by numerous granulocytes
- Inflammatory markers: ↑ CRP, ↑ ESR
- CT scan: assists in the identification of the exact location, extent of pathology, and/or guiding percutaneous aspiration of pus
Definitive diagnosis is based on the identification of actinomycotic sulfur granules or bacteria.
References:[5]
Treatment
-
Antibiotics
- Penicillin (drug of choice)
- Alternatives (in the event of penicillin allergy): doxycycline, clindamycin
-
Surgical treatment: for extensive or severe disease
- Incision and drainage of abscesses
- Sinus tract excisions
- Excision of recalcitrant fibrotic lesions
Prognosis
- Adequate treatment often results in full recovery, however, early follow-up is required to identify possible recurrent infection.
- Without treatment: chronic-progressive disease with contiguous spread (hematogenous spread is rare.)