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Sporotrichosis

Sporotrichosis is a disease caused by the infection of the fungus Sporothrix schenckii (S. schenckii). This fungal disease usually affects the skin, although other rare forms can affect the lungs, joints, bones, and even the brain. more...

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Because S. schencki is naturally found in soil, hay, sphagnum moss, and plants, it usually affects farmers, gardeners, and agricultural workers. It enters through small cuts and abrasions in the skin to cause the infection. In case of sporotrichosis affecting the lungs, the fungal spores enter through the respiratory pathways.

Sporotrichosis progresses slowly - the first symptoms may appear 1 to 12 weeks (average 3 weeks) after the initial exposure to the fungus. Serious complications can also develop in patients who have a compromised immune system.

Forms and symptoms of sporotrichosis

  • Cutaneous or skin sporotrichosis

This is the most common form of this disease. Symptoms of this form includes nodular lesions or bumps in the skin, at the point of entry and also along lymph nodes and vessels. The lesion starts off small and painless, and ranges in color from pink to purple. Left untreated, the lesion becomes larger and look similar to a boil and more lesions will appear, until a chronic ulcer develops.

Usually, cutaneous sporotrichosis lesions occur in the finger, hand, and arm.

  • Pulmonary sporotrichosis

This rare form of the disease occur when S. schenckii spores are inhaled. Symptoms of pulmonary sporotrichosis include productive coughing, nodules and cavitations of the lungs, fibrosis, and swollen hilar lymphs. Patients with this form of sporotrichosis are prone to develop tuberculosis and pneumonia

  • Disseminated sporotrichosis

When the infection spreads from the primary site to secondary sites in the body, the disease develops into a rare and critical form called disseminated sporotrichosis. The infection can spread to joints and bones (called osteoarticular sporotrichosis) as well as the central nervous system and the brain (called sporotrichosis meningitis).

The symptoms of disseminated sporotrichosis include weight loss, anorexia, and appearance of bony lesions.

Diagnosis

Sporotrichosis is a chronic disease with slow progression and often subtle symptoms. It is difficult to diagnose, as many other diseases share similar symptoms and therefore must be ruled out.

Patients with sporotrichosis will have antibody against the fungus S. schenckii, however, due to variability in sensitivity and specificity, it may not be a reliable diagnosis for this disease. The confirming diagnosis remains culturing the fungus from the skin, sputum, synovial fluid, and cerebrospinal fluid.

Prevention

The majority of sporotrichosis cases occur when the fungus is introduced through a cut or puncture in the skin while handling vegetations containing the fungal spores. Prevention of this disease includes wearing long sleeves and gloves while working with soil, hay bales, rose bushes, pine seedlings, and sphagnum moss.

Read more at Wikipedia.org


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ANTIBODY DETECTION IN SPOROTRICHOSIS USING MYCELIAL PHASE SPOROTHRIX SCHENCKII EXOANTIGENS IN AN ELISA TEST
From Revista do Instituto de Medicina Tropical de Sao Paulo, 10/1/05 by Almeida-Paes, R

Almeida-Paes, R.1; Pimenta, M. A.2; Reis, R. S,3; Monteiro, P. C. F.4; Pizzini, C. V.5; Zancope-Oliveira, R. M.6

1,2,3,4,5,6 Fiocruz-Instituto de Pesquisa Clínica Evandro Chagas - Service de Micologia-DEMIP

Introduction and objective: Infections caused by Sporoîhrix xchenckii have increased in recent years, especially in immunocompromised patients. .V, xclienckii can cause either limited cutaneous lesions or invasive, disseminated infections. Systemic sporotrichosis may be due to bloodstream dissemination from a cutaneous lesion or conidia inhalation, Risk factors, such as alcoholism, diabetes, use of immunosuppressive drugs and chronic granulomatous disease may predispose to severe infections, including pulmonary and osteoarticular sporotrichosis. The diagnosis of these clinical manifestations is often difficult and the therapeutic follow-up of patients is usually made by clinical findings, without any knowledge about their immunologie responses against the fungus. In order to solve these questions, we have developed an immunoassay for the serodiagnosis of sporotrichosis. Methods and results: An enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay was developed as a method for specific antibody detection in serum specimens of sporotrichosis patients. The assay was made with mycelial phase Sporothrix schenckii exoantigens and tested against 90 sera from patients with several clinical forms of sporotrichosis. Cross reactivity was analyzed with 72 heterologous sera from patients with paracoccidioidomycosis, cryptococcosis, aspergillosis, histoplasmosis, tuberculosis and American tegumentary leishmaniasis, as well as 76 sera from healthy controls. Sensitivity of 97% and specificity of 89% were observed in this assay. These parameters were higher than previously published data relating the use of ELISA in serodiagnosis of sporotrichosis. Also, we have observed that all cutaneous forms of this disease responded well in the described ELISA, indicating the useful of this assay in the serodiagnosis of sporotrichosis, especially in cutaneous forms that are not promptly diagnosed with immunoprecipitation or agglutination techniques described up to now. Conclusion: These results suggest that the ELISA using mycelial phase S. schenckii exoantigens is a very sentitive diagnostic tool that could be applied to the serodiganosis of sporotrichosis.

Copyright Instituto de Medicina Tropical de Sao Paulo Oct 2005
Provided by ProQuest Information and Learning Company. All rights Reserved

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