ABSTRACT
Primary care physicians in the Eastern United States rarely consider coccidioidomycosis in the differential diagnosis of pulmonary infections or febrile illnesses. However, the mobility of the population mandates consideration of this diagnosis, particularly in patients with fever and cough that do not resolve rapidly and in patients with adenopathy on chest radiography. In this report, we describe two unrelated cases encountered during a single week in a South Carolina internal medicine practice. These cases highlight the importance of obtaining travel histories from patients with atypical pulmonary infections. Early consideration of coccidioidomycosis confers several benefits, including allaying patient anxiety by more timely diagnosis, minimizing the empiric use of antibiotics, and reducing the need for extensive and possibly invasive diagnostic testing.