| Literature DB >> 23228191 |
Margherita Codifava1, Azzurra Guerra, Giulio Rossi, Paolo Paolucci, Lorenzo Iughetti.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Blastomycosis, caused by the thermally dimorphic fungus Blastomyces dermatitidis is a systemic pyogranulomatous infection, endemic in United States and Canada, with few reported cases in Africa and Asia. It is uncommon among children and adolescents, ranging from 3% to 10%. Clinical features vary from asymptomatic spontaneously healing pneumonia, through acute or chronic pneumonia, to a malignant appearing lung mass. Blastomycosis can originate a "metastatic disease" in the skin, bones, genitourinary tract and central nervous system. Bone is the third most common site of blastomycotic lesions, after lung and skin. Bones may be involved in 14-60% of cases of blastomycosis. Direct visualization of single broadbased budding yeast with specific stains in sputum or tissue samples at microscopy is the primary method for diagnosis, while culture is timeconsuming and other methods are unreliable. CASEEntities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23228191 PMCID: PMC3545834 DOI: 10.1186/1824-7288-38-69
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ital J Pediatr ISSN: 1720-8424 Impact factor: 2.638
Figure 1MRI of the left knee prior and post curettage and antifungal therapy. Figure 1a: voluminous neoformation (arrow) with expansive character, inhomogeneous signal intensity and polycyclic contours, extending longitudinally for about 9 cm, infiltrating the soft tissues adjacent to the distal diaphysis and the metaphysis of the femur on the left. The mass has multiple cistic-like areas compatible with signs of intralesional necrosis and determines colliquative loosening and dislocation of the periosteal membrane that appears broadly interrupted. No significant erosion of the cortical bone and cancellous bone adjacent to where we except a focal thinning of the cortex. No injury to the remaining of femoral bone. The muscular structures, in particular the vastus medialis muscle and the biceps femoris, have altered perilesional signal intensity and appear displaced and compressed, without a safe plane of cleavage with the injury. Figure 1b: almost complete resolution of disease, particularly in the middle third of the distal femur; mild edema of the soft tissues and muscular fibers (arrow).
Figure 22a (haematoxylin-eosin X 400) and 2b (Gomori methenamine silver stain magnification X 400): granulomatous inflammation with the presence of giant cell formations rounded intracytoplasmic (arrows), positive for Grocott / Gomori methenamine silver stain.