0521779407-19 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 6, 2007 17:50
1368 Sporotrichosis
SPOROTRICHOSIS
RICHARD A. JACOBS, MD, PhD
history & physical
History
■Chronic infection caused by Sporothrix schenckii, a dimorphic fun-
gus able to grow in yeast form in culture and tissue at 37 degrees
Celsius or as a mold at 25 degrees
■Found in plants, soil, decaying wood, rose thorns; worldwide
➣The organism is usually inoculated into the skin, typically from
a penetrating skin injury; rarely is it inhaled
Signs & Symptoms
■Two main forms: cutaneous and extracutaneous
■Cutaneous:
➣Usually begins as a firm, painless subcutaneous nodule at the
site of inoculation
■This may later ulcerate
■Within several days to weeks, these nodules may extend along the
path of the lymphatics
➣These lesions usually appear and disappear in waves over months
to years; rarely do they regress spontaneously
Extracutaneous:
■Osteoarticular (extremity joint arthritis, carpal tunnel syndrome)
may lead to severe bone and joint destruction if left untreated
■Pulmonary (older males, productive cough, fever and weight loss;
CXR with cavitary lesions)
■Meningitis (usually indolent, CSF with lymphocytic predominance)
■HIV patients:
■Disseminated disease usually in advanced AIDS patients (CD4 <200)
■Skin lesions tend to ulcerate more, are more extensive, and are asso-
ciated with arthritis
■Multiple organs have been described: brain, eye, intestines, liver,
bone marrow
tests
Laboratory
■Basic studies: Blood cultures: positive blood cultures seen in dissem-
inated disease
■Other studies: Tissue culture: diagnostic of infection