Estonian
Albanian
Arabic
Armenian
Azerbaijani
Belarusian
Bengali
Bosnian
Catalan
Czech
Danish
Deutsch
Dutch
English
Estonian
Finnish
Français
Greek
Haitian Creole
Hebrew
Hindi
Hungarian
Icelandic
Indonesian
Irish
Italian
Japanese
Korean
Latvian
Lithuanian
Macedonian
Mongolian
Norwegian
Persian
Polish
Portuguese
Romanian
Russian
Serbian
Slovak
Slovenian
Spanish
Swahili
Swedish
Turkish
Ukrainian
Vietnamese
Български
中文(简体)
中文(繁體)
Skinmed 2016

Primary Cutaneous Coccidioidomycosis Presenting as a Recurrent Preauricular Cyst.

Ainult registreeritud kasutajad saavad artikleid tõlkida
Logi sisse
Link salvestatakse lõikelauale
Shayna C Rivard
Elizabeth Satter

Märksõnad

Abstraktne

A 31-year-old Filipino active duty marine presented with a 2-year history of a waxing and waning nodule on his left cheek that had been incised and drained on multiple occasions. The patient had no significant medical history other than a positive purified protein derivative test with negative chest x-ray finding treated with a 9-month course of isoniazid in 2010. He denied cough, fever, chills, night sweats, weight loss, joint/bone pain, or prior trauma to the area. On initial examination, there was a 1×1-cm erythematous indurated nodule associated with an overlying violaceous scar on his left preauricular cheek. Since the lesion was presumed to be an inflamed epidermal cyst, it was initially treated with 0.1 cc of interlesional triamcinolone acetonide (10 mg/cc). At 1-month follow-up, the lesion was slightly less indurated, but an excisional biopsy was performed to remove the residual nodule. The biopsy showed an essentially normal epidermis with focal dermal fibrosis below which were multiple collections of histiocytes and multinucleated giant cells surrounded by a dense lymphoplasmacytic infiltrate with numerous eosinophils (Figure 1). A few multinucleated giant cells contained large thick-walled spherules, some with endospores, consistent with Coccidioides immitis (Figure 2). Serological tests showed positive serum for C immitis IgG antibodies with low levels of complement-fixing antibodies (1:2). IgM antibodies were negative. Findings from chest x-ray and bone scan failed to reveal evidence of systemic disease. Although the infectious disease physician felt that the patient most likely had primary cutaneous coccidioidomycosis (PCC), since the duration of the infection was unknown and the patient was Filipino, thereby increasing his risk of dissemination, he was placed on a daily regimen of 400 mg of oral fluconazole until his complement fixation titers became undetectable.

Liitu meie
facebooki lehega

Kõige täiuslikum ravimtaimede andmebaas, mida toetab teadus

  • Töötab 55 keeles
  • Taimsed ravimid, mida toetab teadus
  • Maitsetaimede äratundmine pildi järgi
  • Interaktiivne GPS-kaart - märgistage ürdid asukohas (varsti)
  • Lugege oma otsinguga seotud teaduspublikatsioone
  • Otsige ravimtaimi nende mõju järgi
  • Korraldage oma huvisid ja hoidke end kursis uudisteuuringute, kliiniliste uuringute ja patentidega

Sisestage sümptom või haigus ja lugege ravimtaimede kohta, mis võivad aidata, tippige ürdi ja vaadake haigusi ja sümptomeid, mille vastu seda kasutatakse.
* Kogu teave põhineb avaldatud teaduslikel uuringutel

Google Play badgeApp Store badge