Abstract

Zoonoses are important to consider when humans become ill after being in contact with animals. In such cases thorough patient history is crucial, especially when infections have an unclear cause. We present a patient with infection-associated glomerulonephritis, where a horse was the probable source of infection. A young woman was admitted to the district general hospital in Vestfold, Norway, with infection and acute kidney failure. Renal biopsy suggested glomerulonephritis, and nasopharyngeal culture taken at admission detected Streptococcus equi. It emerged that the patient had daily contact with horses. As Streptococcus equi is not part of normal human flora and the clinical signs were compatible with infection-associated glomerulonephritis, it was considered a probable causal link between the microbial finding and diagnosis. The source of infection was one of the horses.

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