Cutaneous blastomycosis in New Brunswick: case report. (9/176)

Blastomycosis is a fungal infection of immunocompetent hosts. We present a case of cutaneous blastomycosis acquired in New Brunswick, which provides evidence that this disease is endemic in Atlantic Canada. This case also demonstrates that the diagnosis of blastomycosis may be elusive. Perseverance, a high index of clinical suspicion and close cooperation with the microbiology laboratory may be required to diagnose this uncommon condition.  (+info)

A case of chromomycosis treated by a combination of cryotherapy, shaving, oral 5-fluorocytosine, and oral amphotericin B. (10/176)

A case of chromomycosis from Comoro Islands was first treated without success with high doses of oral amphotericin B (3 g per day). Treatment with itraconazole (400 mg per day) was also unsuccessful. Then, in vitro tests were done to study the susceptibility of this Fonsecaea pedrosoi strain to antifungal drugs. It was resistant to itraconazole, sensitive to 5-fluorocytosine, and the combination of 5-fluorocytosine with amphotericin B was synergistic. The patient was then treated with this last combination of drugs, which seemed to be effective. The patient stopped this treatment after six months, and relapse occurred two years later. The best therapeutic strategy in cases of chromomycosis seems to be a combination of two drugs chosen according to the results of prior antifungal susceptibility testing.  (+info)

Utility of inoculum counting (Walshe and English criteria) in clinical diagnosis of onychomycosis caused by nondermatophytic filamentous fungi. (11/176)

Opportunistic onychomycosis caused by nondermatophytic molds may differ in treatment from tinea unguium. Confirmed diagnosis of opportunistic onychomycosis classically requires more than one laboratory analysis to show consistency of fungal outgrowth. Walshe and English in 1966 proposed to extract sufficient diagnostic information from a single patient consultation by counting the number of nail fragments positive for inoculum of the suspected fungus. Twenty fragments were plated per patient, and each case in which five or more fragments grew the same mold was considered an infection by that mold, provided that compatible filaments were also seen invading the nail tissue by direct microscopy. This widely used and often recommended method has never been validated. Therefore, the validity of substituting any technique based on inoculum counting for conventional follow-up study in the diagnosis of opportunistic onychomycosis was investigated. Sampling of 473 patients was performed repeatedly. Nail specimens were examined by direct microscopy, and 15 pieces were plated on standard growth media. After 3 weeks, outgrowing dermatophytes were recorded, and pieces growing any nondermatophyte mold were counted. Patients returned on two to eight additional occasions over a 1- to 3-year period for similar examinations. Onychomycosis was etiologically classified based on long-term study. Opportunistic onychomycosis was definitively established for 86 patients. Counts of nondermatophyte molds in initial examinations were analyzed to determine if they successfully predicted both true cases of opportunistic onychomycosis and cases of insignificant mold contamination. There was a strong positive statistical association between mold colony counts and true opportunistic onychomycosis. Logistic regression analysis, however, determined that even the highest counts predicted true cases of opportunistic onychomycosis only 89.7% of the time. The counting criterion suggested by Walshe and English was correct only 23.2% of the time. Acremonium infections were especially likely to be correctly predicted by inoculum counting. Inoculum counting could be used to indicate a need for repeat studies in cases of false-negative results from laboratory direct microscopy. Inoculum counting cannot serve as a valid substitute for follow-up study in the diagnosis of opportunistic onychomycosis. It may, nonetheless, provide useful information both to the physician and to the laboratory, and it may be especially valuable when the patient does not present for follow-up sampling.  (+info)

Nocardia brasiliensis infection seen on grafted skin of the dorsum of a foot. (12/176)

For the past 4 years a 23 y-old female has noticed erythema on the dorsum of the right foot, where skin was grafted due to a traffic accident 20 years ago. She visited the Department of Dermatology of Gifu Prefectural Hospital on Oct. 19, 1998; her general health was good. Physical examination disclosed a swelling with erythema, papules and pustules on the dorsum of the right foot. The results of routine laboratory investigations were within normal limits except for the white blood cell count (11,300/mm(3)), blood sediment rate (25 mm/hrs), C reactive protein (1.21) and rheumatoid factor (x 16.6). Several yellowish and verrucous or wrinkled colonies were grown on Sabourauds agar culture from the biopsied specimen of the foot. Histopathological features showed epidermal hyperplasia with elongation of rete ridges and granulomatous changes in the dermis; many mononuclear and giant cells were present, and several positive fine filamentous and irregularly branching structures with PAS and Grocott stains were seen in the granulomatous nests. Both clinical and histopathological features led to speculation of Nocardia infection, and Nocardia brasiliensis was determined. The patient was treated by surgical total resection including the grafted skin. Although a soybean-sized nodule was seen on the border of the skin-graft of the foot three months later, there was no recurrence after the local resection.  (+info)

The pseudomonas hot-foot syndrome. (13/176)

BACKGROUND: Between March and May 1998, there was an outbreak of a clinically distinct skin eruption on the soles of the feet of children who used a community wading pool. METHODS: We reviewed the medical records of 40 children in whom this syndrome developed between March and May 1998. We treated 17 children and advised the attending physicians on the care of the other 23. Follow-up data were obtained for up to one year. RESULTS: Exquisitely painful erythematous plantar nodules developed in 40 children (age, 2 to 15 years) within 40 hours after they had used a wading pool whose floor was coated with abrasive grit. Culture of the plantar pustules from one child yielded Pseudomonas aeruginosa with a pattern on pulsed-field gel electrophoresis that was identical to that of a strain of P. aeruginosa cultured from the pool water. A skin-biopsy specimen from this patient showed a perivascular and perieccrine neutrophilic infiltrate, and a specimen from another patient showed a dermal microabscess. Thirty-seven patients were treated symptomatically; three others were treated with cephalexin. All patients recovered within 14 days, but three children had recurrences of the painful plantar nodules within 24 hours after using the pool again. Folliculitis developed in one patient. CONCLUSIONS: The "pseudomonas hot-foot syndrome" is characterized by the acute onset in children of exquisitely tender plantar nodules and a benign, self-limited course. This community outbreak developed after exposure to pool water containing high concentrations of P. aeruginosa.  (+info)

Variation in restriction fragment length polymorphisms among serial isolates from patients with Trichophyton rubrum infection. (14/176)

Molecular genotyping of strains of Trichophyton rubrum and T. mentagrophytes from patients with onychomycosis of the toes was performed to ascertain whether the fungal genotype changes over the course of time as sequential samples were obtained from patients receiving antifungal therapy and during follow-up. Sixty-six serial strains of T. rubrum and 11 strains of T. mentagrophytes were obtained from 20 patients (16 patients with T. rubrum, 4 with T. mentagrophytes) who were treated with oral antifungal therapy and observed over periods of up to 36 months. These strains were screened for genetic variation by hybridization of EcoRI-digested genomic DNAs with a probe amplified from the small-subunit (18S) ribosomal DNA and adjacent internal transcribed spacer regions. A total of five restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) types were observed among 66 strains of T. rubrum. Two major RFLP types, differentiated by one band shift, represented 68% of the samples. None of the patients had a unique genotype. More than one RFLP type was often observed from a single patient (same nail) over a period of 1, 2, or 3 years, even in cases that did not appear cured at any time. Samples taken from different nails of the same patient had either the same or a different genotype. The genotypic variation did not correspond to any detectable phenotypic variation. Furthermore, no correlation was observed between the efficacy of the treatment administered and the genotype observed. While the DNA region studied distinguished among T. rubrum, T. mentagrophytes, and T. tonsurans, intraspecific RFLP variation was observed for T. rubrum and T. mentagrophytes strains. While independent multiple infection and coinhabitation of multiple strains may explain the presence of different genotypes in a nail, microevolutionary events such as rapid substrain shuffling, as seen in studies of repetitive regions in Candida species, may also produce the same result. The recovery of multiple strains during the course of sequential sampling of uncured patients further suggests that the typing system is not able to distinguish between relapse or reinfection, ongoing infection, and de novo infection.  (+info)

Hand-foot syndrome associated with short infusions of combination chemotherapy with gemcitabine and vinorelbine. (15/176)

The hand-foot syndrome (palmar-plantar erythrodysesthesia) is a side-effect which is associated with several cytotoxic agents (e.g. 5-fluorouracil, UFT, capecitabine, cytarabine, doxorubicin, liposomal-encapsulated doxorubicin). An association with a prolonged infusion of high doses of vinorelbine has also been described. To date a hand-foot syndrome after gemcitabine or short infusions of vinorelbine has not been reported before. The patient described here had a non-small-cell lung cancer stage IIIB disease and developed a hand-foot syndrome after short infusions of standard-dose chemotherapy of a combination with gemcitabine and vinorelbine.  (+info)

Fungal nail infection: assessing the new treatment options. (16/176)

Onychomycosis can be improved or eradicated with appropriate treatment. Newer oral antifungal drugs are highly effective and have few adverse effects, although care in prescribing is needed because of potential drug interactions and hepatobiliary dysfunction.  (+info)