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Artigo em Inglês | IMSEAR | ID: sea-137491

RESUMO

Two cases of disseminated Penicilliosis marneffei are reported; both were middle-aged female patients from the central part of Thailand who presented with multiple cystic skin lesion. Their systemic symptoms included chronic fever, weight loss, malaise, anemia, cervical lymphadenopathy and osteolytic bone lesions. They had no underlying disease causing immunosupression and both were HIV-negative. Skin manifestations occurred frequently in disseminated penicilliosis and abscesses were the most common manifestation in HIV-negative patients whereas umbillicated papules were common in HIV-positive ones. A biopsy from the skin lesions was good specimens for histopathological study and frequently yielded positive culture results. The characteristic histopathological feature is granulomatous inflammation with macrophages containing yeast-like organisms with septa which show a lack of budding. The characteristic mycologic feature of P.marneffei is a thermally dimorphic fungus which produces a mycelial phase colony appearing within 2 days at room temperature (25-30oC) and which produces a bright, purple-red, water-soluble pigment into the surrounding agar. The yeast form grows at 37oC as a whitish colony produced in 4 days and this produces less red pigment compared with the mycelial form. The first case was treated with oral itraconazole intermittently as a result of multiple recurrent episodes until she died of the disease after one year. The second case was treated with amphotercin B intravenously followed by oral itraconazole with a satisfactory result.

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