Listeriosis differential diagnosis: Difference between revisions

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* Infectious causes of neonatal [[meningitis]], such as ''[[E. coli]]'' or Group B ''[[Streptococcus]]''
* Infectious causes of neonatal [[meningitis]], such as ''[[E. coli]]'' or Group B ''[[Streptococcus]]''
* Infectious causes of [[CNS disease]], such as ''[[N. meningitidis]]'', ''[[Streptococcus spp.|Streptococcus]] spp.'', or [[abscess|abscess formation]]
* Infectious causes of [[CNS disease]], such as ''[[N. meningitidis]]'', ''[[Streptococcus spp.|Streptococcus]] spp.'', or [[abscess|abscess formation]]
* Infectious causes of genitourinary diseases, such as ''[[Candida]]'' infections, ''[[E. coli]]'', ''[[Staphylococcus]] spp.'', [[enterobacteriaceae]], ''[[Serratia]] spp.'', or ''[[Hemophilus]] spp.''
* Infectious causes of genitourinary diseases, such as ''[[Candida]]'' infections, ''[[E. coli]]'', ''[[Staphylococcus]] spp.'', [[enterobacteriaceae]], ''[[Serratia]] spp.'', or ''[[Hemophilus spp]].''
* Infectious causes of [[endocarditis]], such as ''[[Staphylococcus]]'' or [[enterobacteriaceae]]
* Infectious causes of [[endocarditis]], such as ''[[Staphylococcus]]'' or [[enterobacteriaceae]]
* Other organisms that have morphological resemblance to ''Listeria'', such as pneumococci, diphtheroids, or ''Haemophilus spp.''
* Other organisms that have morphological resemblance to ''[[Listeria monocytogenes|Listeria]]'', such as [[pneumococci]], [[Diphtheroid|diphtheroids]], or ''[[Haemophilus spp]].''
* [[Hematological malignancies]]
* [[Hematological malignancies]]
* [[Tuberculosis]]
* [[Tuberculosis]]

Revision as of 15:02, 24 February 2017

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: João André Alves Silva, M.D. [2]; Yazan Daaboul, M.D.

Overview

Listeriosis is associated with more than one clinical syndrome. It must be differentiated from other infections that cause fever and systemic/localized symptoms (either CNS disease, gastroenteritis, genitourinary disease, endocarditis, or bacteremia), such as E. coli, Neisseria spp., Streptococcus spp., Staphylococcus spp., Shigella, Salmonella, Campylobacter, Serratia spp., or Haemophilus spp., mononucleosis, or tuberculosis. Listeria monocytogenes must also be differentiated from other organisms that are morphologically similar, such as pneumococci, diphtheroids, or Haemophilus spp. Differential diagnosis of listeriosis additionally includes hematologic malignancies (such as leukemia or lymphoma), thyroid disease, drug fever, vasculitides, or rheumatologic diseases.

Differential Diagnosis

The differential diagnosis of listeriosis includes the following:

References


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