Internal Medicine

(Wang) #1

0521779407-09 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 4, 2007 21:13


720 Histoplasma Capsulatum

■Massively elevated serum ferritin levels may indicate disease, espe-
cially in HIV/AIDS patients
■CSF (with meningitis):
➣Pleocytosis: cell counts 10–100, lymphocyte predominance
➣Hypoglycorrhachia, elevated protein 80%

Specific Tests
■Cultures:
➣Sputum – 10–15% acute, 60% of cavitary disease, yield increases
with number of specimens
➣AIDS with pulmonary disease – 90% of bronchoscopy specimens
positive, BM and Blood cx 50% positive
➣Meningitis – 20–65% recovery
➣Pericardial/pleural disease – fluid low recovery, tissue better
■Antigen detection – urine (occ. serum): mainstay of diagnosis, 90%
of patients with PDH will be positive, 40% with cavitary disease, 20%
with acute disease. Excellent test for immunosuppressed
■Serology: Comp-fix (CF) 1:8 positive, 1:32 strongly suggests active
infection; four-fold rise in titer indicative of infection. False-positive
rate 15%, commonly observed with coccidioidomycosis or blasto-
mycosis.

Imaging (CXR)
■Acute: patchy pneumonitis that calcifies and hilar LAN (heavy expo-
sure leads to “buckshot” appearance). Ghon complex and pul-
monary calcifications with healed disease.
■Acute reinfection: numerous small nodules that are diffusely scat-
tered throughout both lung fields.
■Histoplasmoma: central core of calcium, rings of calcium, clusters
(“mulberry” calcifications)
■Cavitary disease: cavitary lesions in upper lobes, distinguish from
preexisting bullae
■Acute Progressive Disseminated Histo: patchy pneumonitis with
hilar node enlargement

differential diagnosis
■Acute pulmonary histo: distinguish influenza, other forms of
community-acquired pneumonia
■Mediastinal lymphadenopathy: often considered hematologic
malignancy when actually is histo
■Sarcoidosis difficult to distinguish
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