In this report, two patients were identified to have coinfection with C. jejuni and C. coli. Commonly, simultaneous detection of both species of C. jejuni and C. coli is unusual in clinical laboratories. The patient’s manifestations were diarrhea followed by abdominal pain and fever, as well as the appearance of blood and mucus in the stool. Therefore, it can be concluded that these clinical symptoms can be considered as the clinical indexes for the diagnosis of campylobacteriosis in the campylobacter infections. The present report shows that fever, diarrhea, leukocytes, and blood in the stool are the most common clinical symptoms of coinfection with two species of C. jejuni and C. coli. Therefore, in clinical diagnosis, there is no distinction between the clinical manifestations of coinfection with two campylobacter species.
Previously, four cases of coinfection with
C. jejuni and
C. coli were observed in England in 2001, and 3.6% coinfection with different campylobacter strains has been reported in 1991. Also, 1.8% coinfection with
C. jejuni and
C. coli was observed in Brazil and India in 2010, and 22 children were reported to have coinfection with other enteropathogenic species of
E. coli, rotavirus, and Salmonella in Poland in 2013 (
2,
11-
13).
In this report, the resistance of the diagnosed organism in the two patients was investigated phenotypically and genotypically and it was revealed that they were carrying several antibiotic resistant genes. In a study by Feizabadi et al. in Tehran, Iran, the amount of resistance to antimicrobial agents were as follows: ciprofloxacin (61.7%), ceftazidime (47%), carbenicillin (35%), tetracycline (20.5%), cefotaxime (14.7%), ampicillin (11.7%), neomycin erythromycin and chloramphenicol (2.9%), gentamicin, streptomycin, imipenem, and colistin (0.0%) (
14). Considering the high resistance of
C. coli to erythromycin, which is the drug of choice for treating
C. jejuni (
15), the evidence of the present report shows that if one is coinfected with
C. jejuni and
C. coli, their antibiotic resistance should be taken into consideration. It might also require a different antibiotic treatment.
In this report, the coinfection with C. jejuni and C. coli in one individual was reported for the first time in Iran. The coinfection with C. jejuni and C. coli in one individual is less addressed in other parts of the world.
This is the first report investigating the clinical symptoms of coinfection with two campylobacter species as no other report has been issued, up to now, on investigating the clinical symptoms of coinfection with two campylobacter species.
Indeed, it is not true that only one organism can always be the cause of infection, but it is recommended that all the enteropathogenic organisms should be considered in the stool sample culture, because ignoring the coinfection with multiple organisms can lead to a wrong or incomplete treatment as well as the longer stay of the patient in the hospital. The present report attempts to push laboratories to focus on the coinfection since the possibility of simultaneous existence of more than one factor causing infection can always happen.