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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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Sporotrichosis, Plain of Jars, Lao People's Democratic Republic
From Emerging Infectious Diseases, 9/1/05 by Paul N. Newton

To the Editor: In May 2003, a previously healthy, 42-year-old rice farmer and miller, living on the Plain of Jars (Xieng Khuang Province) in northeast Lao People's Democratic Republic (PDR) (Laos), dehusked and polished glutinous rice in her hand-operated rice mill. While milling, her hand slipped, removing the skin covering the interpharyngeal joint of her right index finger, on a dusty, wooden part of the machine. She did not recall the implantation of a wood splinter. During the following 4 weeks, multiple firm, erythematous lesions developed, which were not tender, fluctuant, or itchy, at the site of the injury and on the medial and anterior aspects of the lower and upper arm (Figure). The lesions spread proximally from the site of injury, but they remained confined to her right arm. She had no fever, and no lymphadenopathy developed. Her household had no domestic animals, including cats. No systemic disease developed, and she showed no evidence of immunosuppression, diabetes, or alcoholism. While waiting for a diagnosis, she persuaded a surgeon to excise all the lesions, but they soon recurred. She believed that the only solution would be to have her arm amputated. Initial biopsy specimens demonstrated no organisms and showed no growth on Sabouraud dextrose agar. Without facilities for further fungal diagnostic work in Lao PDR, but with a probable clinical diagnosis of sporotrichosis, we sent one of the excised lesions to Taiwan for molecular analysis by previously described methods (1,2). Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was negative for mycobacteria but positive for Sporothrix schenckii, the cause of sporotrichosis, and the diagnosis was confirmed by sequencing the 18S rRNA gene, which showed 100% identity to that of S. schenckii (1,2). The lesions resolved with 6 months of oral itraconazole therapy (100 mg every 12 h).

S. schenckii is a dimorphic fungus found in soil, hay, decaying vegetation, and moss. Persons exposed to these environmental foci, such as farmers and gardeners, are especially at risk. Percutaneous inoculation is presumably the main method of infection, although inhalation and insect and mammal bites and scratches, especially from armadillos and cats, have been implicated (3,4). Our patient presumably contracted the fungus from the wood frame of the milling machine. In the 1940s, contamination from untreated wood was responsible for an epidemic that affected [approximately equal to]3,000 gold miners in South Africa (from timbers in the mine). Lymphocutaneous sporotrichosis is the most frequent presentation, and the traditional treatments are oral saturated potassium iodide solution and local hyperthermia, but oral itraconazole for 3 to 6 months is now recommended (3,4).

Sporotrichosis has been described from North and South America, Europe, and Japan. In Asia and Australasia, it has been described from India (5), Taiwan (1), Australia (6), and Thailand (7), but apparently not from Laos, Cambodia, and Burma (Myanmar). Serologic evidence for human sporotrichosis infection is found in highland areas of southwest Vietnam (8). At least in part, the relative paucity of reports probably refects the lack of sophisticated fungal diagnostic techniques in much of Southeast Asia. Some evidence suggests that sporotrichosis is more prevalent in tropical environments with relatively cool temperatures and high humidity such the Peruvian Andes (9), northwest India (5), southwestern Vietnam (8), and in Laos in the Plain of Jars. If this environmental association is correct, sporotrichosis may occur more extensively in the cooler humid areas of Asia, such as the highlands of China, Laos, Vietnam, and Burma. Sporotrichosis can disseminate in HIV-infected patients, and this syndrome may increase as the prevalence of HIV infection rises in these areas.

With 73% of the Lao population living on <US$2/day (10) and one accessible microbiologic culture laboratory in Laos, PCR is not an available local routine diagnostic technique. We were fortunate to have access to an overseas diagnostic facility, which allowed confirmation of the clinical diagnosis before the patient received a prolonged course of a drug with adverse effects and drug interactions.

Diagnosis by histopathologic examination and culture may be difficult, and identifying laboratories in different regions of the subtropics and tropics with an interest in diagnosis of sporotrichoid lesions and the capability to perform culture and PCR would facilitate the diagnosis and awareness of this disease. Itraconazole, which has become the drug of choice for lymphocutaneous sporotrichosis, is expensive. Saturated solution of potassium iodide is an inexpensive alternative and appears to be effective, although adverse effects occur frequently (3,4).

Acknowledgments

We thank the patient and Chanpheng Thammavong, Tran Xuan Mai, Mayfong Mayxay, and Tran Duc Si for their help.

This study was part of the Wellcome Trust-Mahosot Hospital--Oxford Tropical Medicine Research Collaboration, funded by the Wellcome Trust of Great Britain.

Paul N. Newton, *([dagger]) Wen-Hung Chung, ([DAGGER]) Rattanaphone Phetsouvanh, * and Nicholas J. White * ([dagger]) ([section])

* Mahosot Hospital, Vientiane, Lao People's Democratic Republic; ([dagger]) Churchill Hospital, Oxford, United Kingdom; ([DAGGER]) Chang Gung Memorial Hospital, Taipei, Taiwan, Republic of China; and ([section]) Mahidol University, Bangkok, Thailand

References

(1.) Hu S, Chung WH, Hung SI, Ho HC, Wang ZW, Chen CH, et al. Detection of Sporothrix schenckii in clinical samples by a nested PCR assay. J Clin Microbiol. 2003;41:1414-8.

(2.) Telenti A, Marchesi F, Balz M, Bally F, Bottger EC, Bodmer T. Rapid identification of mycobacteria to the species level by polymerase chain reaction and restriction enzyme analysis. J Clin Microbiol. 1993;31:175-8.

(3.) Kauffman CA. Sporotrichosis. Clin Infect Dis. 1999;29:231-7.

(4.) Kauffman CA, Hajjeh R, Chapman SW. Practice guidelines for the management of patients with sporotrichosis. Clin Infect Dis. 2000;30:684-7.

(5.) Ghosh A, Chakrabarti A, Sharma VK, Singh K, Singh A. Sporotrichosis in Himachal Pradesh (north India). Trans R Soc Trop Med Hyg. 1999;93:41-5.

(6.) Pinn TG. Sporotrichosis in a Queensland bushwalker. Med J Aust. 1998; 169:287.

(7.) Kwangsukstith C, Vanittanakom N, Khanjanasthiti P, Uthammachai C. Cutaneous sporotrichosis in Thailand: first reported case. Mycoses. 1990;33:513-7.

(8.) Tran Xuan M, Tran Thi H, Tran Thi KD. Diagnosis of sporothrix by direct slide agglutination method and immunoperoxidase ELISA. Journal of the University of Medicine and Pharmacology of Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. 1994;(Suppl 2): 280-8. [Vietnamese]

(9.) Pappas PG, Tellez I, Deep AE, Nolasco D, Holdago W, Bustamante B. Sporotrichosis in Peru--description of an area of hyperendemicity. Clin Infect Dis. 2000;30:65-70.

(10.) United Nations Development Programme. Human development indicators, 2004. [Available from http://hdr.undp.org/reports/ global/2004/(cited 17 Jul 2005)].

Address for correspondence: Nicholas J. White, Faculty of Tropical Medicine, Mahidol University, 420/6 Rajvithi Rd, Bangkok 10400, Thailand; fax: 66-2-354-9169; email: nickw@ tropmedres.ac

COPYRIGHT 2005 U.S. National Center for Infectious Diseases
COPYRIGHT 2005 Gale Group

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