Cureus. 2026 Jan 27;18(1):e102375. doi: 10.7759/cureus.102375. eCollection 2026 Jan.
ABSTRACT
Salmonella species are an uncommon cause of mycotic aneurysms and invasive sepsis, with human infection most often acquired through ingestion, and parenteral transmission being exceedingly rare. We describe a middle-aged farmer who developed Salmonella bacteremia and an infected infrarenal abdominal aortic aneurysm following an accidental needle-stick injury while vaccinating cattle. Blood cultures and intraoperative tissue specimens yielded Salmonella species. Despite appropriate targeted antimicrobial therapy, the disease progressed rapidly, resulting in rupture of the abdominal aorta that required emergent aortic ligation and axillo-bifemoral bypass, complicated by bowel ischemia and necrosis necessitating left hemicolectomy, colostomy, subsequent re-resection, and acute kidney failure requiring hemodialysis. After multiple surgical interventions, prolonged intensive care, and extended antimicrobial treatment, the patient eventually stabilized and was discharged in satisfactory condition, underscoring the aggressive nature of Salmonella-associated vascular infections and the need to consider rare zoonotic and occupational transmission routes in agricultural workers.
PMID:41769565 | PMC:PMC12937275 | DOI:10.7759/cureus.102375

