Correct Answer: A. Nocardia asteroides
Nocardia asteroides is the classic etiologic agent of brain abscess with the distinctive microbiological triad presented here. The organism is Gram-positive, branching, filamentous (resembling fungi but prokaryotic), weakly acid-fast (modified Ziehl-Neelsen staining), and grows on paraffin bait media (a selective enrichment technique where Nocardia preferentially utilizes paraffin as a carbon source). Brain abscess from Nocardia typically occurs in immunocompromised hosts (HIV/AIDS, organ transplant recipients, chronic corticosteroid use) and can be hematogenously disseminated from pulmonary or cutaneous sources. In India, Nocardia brain abscess is an important opportunistic infection in the pre-HAART and early-HAART era HIV population. The organism is aerobic, partially acid-fast (unlike fully acid-fast TB), and the paraffin bait test is a key differential diagnostic feature. Diagnosis is confirmed by culture on blood agar or Sabouraud dextrose agar, with the characteristic branching filaments visible on Gram stain. Treatment typically involves prolonged sulfonamide therapy (trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole is the DOC in India) combined with neurosurgical drainage if indicated.
Why the other options are wrong
B. Actinomyces israelii — Actinomyces is Gram-positive and filamentous but is anaerobic (not aerobic like Nocardia) and does not grow on paraffin bait media. It is also not acid-fast at all, distinguishing it from Nocardia's weak acid-fastness. While Actinomyces causes CNS infections, it typically presents as subdural empyema or meningitis in the setting of dental/oral infections, not brain abscess in immunocompromised hosts. The paraffin bait test is negative for Actinomyces, making this the key discriminator. C. Cryptococcus neoformans — Cryptococcus is a yeast (fungus), not a bacterium, and would appear as Gram-positive cocci or short rods, not branching filaments. It is not acid-fast and does not grow on paraffin bait media. While Cryptococcus is a common cause of meningitis in HIV patients in India, it does not present with the branching filamentous morphology or acid-fastness described. The distinctive Gram-positive branching filaments immediately exclude fungal pathogens. D. Mycobacterium tuberculosis — M. tuberculosis is fully acid-fast (not weakly acid-fast) and appears as slender rods, not branching filaments. It does not grow on paraffin bait media; instead, it requires Löwenstein-Jensen or MGIT media. While TB can cause brain abscess (tuberculoma), the microbiological profile—particularly the branching filamentous morphology and weak acid-fastness—is incompatible with M. tuberculosis. The paraffin bait test would be negative, ruling out TB.
High-Yield Facts
- Nocardia asteroides is Gram-positive, branching, filamentous, and weakly acid-fast (modified Ziehl-Neelsen positive).
- Paraffin bait media is the selective enrichment test for Nocardia; the organism preferentially utilizes paraffin as a carbon source.
- Nocardia brain abscess occurs primarily in immunocompromised hosts (HIV CD4 <100, transplant recipients, chronic corticosteroid users).
- Trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (TMP-SMX) is the drug of choice for Nocardia infections in India; prolonged therapy (6–12 months) is required.
- Nocardia is aerobic and grows on blood agar and Sabouraud dextrose agar, unlike anaerobic Actinomyces.
- Brain abscess from Nocardia often follows hematogenous dissemination from pulmonary or cutaneous sources in immunocompromised patients.
Mnemonics
NOCA for Nocardia No paraffin bait? Out (not Nocardia) | Carbon source (paraffin) | Aerobic | Acid-fast (weakly). Use this when you see 'paraffin bait media'—it's the Nocardia signature. Branching + Weakly Acid-Fast = Nocardia If you see branching filaments + weak acid-fastness, think Nocardia first. Actinomyces is anaerobic and not acid-fast; TB is fully acid-fast and not branching. This combination is pathognomonic for Nocardia.
NBE Trap
NBE pairs Nocardia with immunocompromised hosts (especially HIV) to lure students into choosing Cryptococcus, which is more common in Indian HIV populations. The paraffin bait media and weak acid-fastness are the discriminators that separate Nocardia from other branching organisms (Actinomyces) and acid-fast bacilli (TB).
Clinical Pearl
In Indian HIV clinics, when a CD4 <100 patient presents with brain abscess and imaging shows multiple ring-enhancing lesions (unlike the solitary lesion typical of TB), Nocardia should be high on the differential. The paraffin bait test, though not always available in resource-limited settings, is the gold-standard confirmatory test. Early recognition and prolonged TMP-SMX therapy can prevent mortality in this vulnerable population.
_Reference: Jawetz, Melnick & Adelberg's Medical Microbiology (Ch. 27 – Nocardia); Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine (Ch. 158 – Nocardia infections)_