Julie,
Thank you for your kind reply.
In May when this episode began my son was very ill (he was away at college came home having lost 30 lbs and sounding/looking AWFUL). It took a week to figure out what he was growing. None of the IV antibiotics were touching it. Finally we were told mycobacterium chelonae. He stabilized, regained the weight and looked good. But his recovery plateaued and by the end of this semester he was losing weight and coughing more. The reports coming back from Denver showed that he was resistant to all but 2 (and a half...) IV antibiotics.
The original ID doc said that it couldn't be irradicated only held at bay with 6 months on/off the IVs. The CF doc (who is wonderful) brought in a second opinion ID doc who confirmed the first. The two ID docs said that mycobacterium chelonae has been renamed mycobacterium absecessus.
In my research I saw references to MA/MC limiting transplant options. The CF docs said that there are some transplant centers that are more conservative than others and won't transplant a patient with B Cepacia or MA - and others that will. They acknowledged that it increases the risk factors.
I'm so glad to learn that you have had minimal side effects and that you are able to be on the transplant list (I understand that in Canada everyone is assumed to be an organ donor unless they specify otherwise - in the US we are just the opposite. Backwards!).
Thank you for your kind reply.
In May when this episode began my son was very ill (he was away at college came home having lost 30 lbs and sounding/looking AWFUL). It took a week to figure out what he was growing. None of the IV antibiotics were touching it. Finally we were told mycobacterium chelonae. He stabilized, regained the weight and looked good. But his recovery plateaued and by the end of this semester he was losing weight and coughing more. The reports coming back from Denver showed that he was resistant to all but 2 (and a half...) IV antibiotics.
The original ID doc said that it couldn't be irradicated only held at bay with 6 months on/off the IVs. The CF doc (who is wonderful) brought in a second opinion ID doc who confirmed the first. The two ID docs said that mycobacterium chelonae has been renamed mycobacterium absecessus.
In my research I saw references to MA/MC limiting transplant options. The CF docs said that there are some transplant centers that are more conservative than others and won't transplant a patient with B Cepacia or MA - and others that will. They acknowledged that it increases the risk factors.
I'm so glad to learn that you have had minimal side effects and that you are able to be on the transplant list (I understand that in Canada everyone is assumed to be an organ donor unless they specify otherwise - in the US we are just the opposite. Backwards!).