Authors
Lang Wu, Jiayao Wang, Jin Zhu, Teng Li, Yueying Chen, Limin Luo, Ye Zhang, Shoubin Ning, Bairong Li
Published in
BMC infectious diseases. Jul 15, 2026. Epub Jul 15, 2026.
Abstract
Non-tuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) are important opportunistic pathogens that most commonly infect the lungs. Primary involvement of the gastrointestinal tract-especially the small intestine-is exceedingly rare, and small-bowel infection caused by Mycobacterium kansasii (M. kansasii) has seldom been reported.
We describe an extremely rare case of primary small-intestinal M. kansasii infection in an immunocompetent young man who presented with prolonged chronic diarrhea and fever. After an extensive but unrevealing diagnostic work-up, the etiology was finally established by microbial metagenomic sequencing of tissue obtained by double-balloon endoscopy. Building on the initial regimen of ethambutol hydrochloride, rifampicin, and clarithromycin-and with subsequent antibiotic adjustments tailored to the patient's evolving symptoms-clinical symptoms resolved completely, and follow-up endoscopy showed mucosal improvement.
This case underscores that NTM infection should be considered in the differential diagnosis of unexplained chronic gastrointestinal symptoms and highlights the pivotal role of modern molecular techniques in reaching a precise diagnosis. Detailed analysis of the case together with a review of the literature aims to raise clinicians' awareness and improve management of this rare entity.
PMID:
42458280
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 16 Jul 2026.
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