| Literature DB >> 25614735 |
Abstract
Sporotrichosis is a chronic granulomatous mycotic infection caused by Sporothrix schenckii, a common saprophyte of soil, decaying wood, hay, and sphagnum moss, that is endemic in tropical/subtropical areas. The recent phylogenetic studies have delineated the geographic distribution of multiple distinct Sporothrix species causing sporotrichosis. It characteristically involves the skin and subcutaneous tissue following traumatic inoculation of the pathogen. After a variable incubation period, progressively enlarging papulo-nodule at the inoculation site develops that may ulcerate (fixed cutaneous sporotrichosis) or multiple nodules appear proximally along lymphatics (lymphocutaneous sporotrichosis). Osteoarticular sporotrichosis or primary pulmonary sporotrichosis are rare and occur from direct inoculation or inhalation of conidia, respectively. Disseminated cutaneous sporotrichosis or involvement of multiple visceral organs, particularly the central nervous system, occurs most commonly in persons with immunosuppression. Saturated solution of potassium iodide remains a first line treatment choice for uncomplicated cutaneous sporotrichosis in resource poor countries but itraconazole is currently used/recommended for the treatment of all forms of sporotrichosis. Terbinafine has been observed to be effective in the treatment of cutaneous sporotrichosis. Amphotericin B is used initially for the treatment of severe, systemic disease, during pregnancy and in immunosuppressed patients until recovery, then followed by itraconazole for the rest of the therapy.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25614735 PMCID: PMC4295339 DOI: 10.1155/2014/272376
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dermatol Res Pract ISSN: 1687-6113
Figure 1Lymphocutaneous sporotrichosis. Noduloulcerative lesions appear along the lymphatics proximal to the initial inoculation injury site.
Figure 2Fixed cutaneous sporotrichosis. A crusted/verrucous plaque develops at inoculation site, seen here over face of a child.
Figure 3Sporothrix schenckii colony on Sabouraud's glucose agar (SDA) at 25°C. Initial cream color turns brown black as it matures.
Figure 4(a) Sporothrix schenckii from culture on SDA at 25°C. Seen here is delicate branching, mold form with pyriform conidia in characteristic flower-like arrangement or sleeve-like pattern (stain-lactophenol cotton blue ×40). (b) Yeast phase of Sporothrix schenckii isolate from culture on brain heart infusion agar at 37°C. Budding yeast cells (thick arrows) and cigar shaped yeast cells (thin arrows) interspersed between spores (Grams' stain, ×100) are seen here.
Recommendations by Infectious Diseases Society of America for Sporotrichosis Treatment*.
| Sr. number | Clinical manifestations | Preferred treatment [dose] | Alternative treatment | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Uncomplicated cutaneous sporotrichosis | Itraconazole [200 mg/day] | Itraconazole [200 mg b.i.d.] or terbinafine [500 mg b.i.d.] or SSKI [increasing doses] or fluconazole [400–800 mg/day] or local hyperthermia | Treatment for 2–4 weeks after lesions have resolved |
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| 2 | Osteoarticular sporotrichosis | Itraconazole [200 mg twice daily (b.i.d.)] | Liposomal amphotericin B (3–5 mg/kg/day) or deoxycholate amphotericin B [0.7–1 mg/kg/day] until resolution | Switching to itraconazole after resolution and treatment for a total of 12 months |
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| 3 | Pulmonary sporotrichosis | Liposomal amphotericin B [3–5 mg/kg/day] and then itraconazole [200 mg b.i.d.] | Deoxycholate amphotericin B [0.7–1 mg/kg/day] until recovery and then itraconazole [200 mg b.i.d.] | Treating less severe disease with itraconazole. Treatment for at least 12 months |
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| 4 | Meningeal sporotrichosis | Liposomal Amphotericin B [3–5 mg/kg/day] and then itraconazole [200 mg b.i.d.] | Deoxycholate amphotericin B [0.7–1 mg/kg/day] until recovery and then itraconazole [200 mg b.i.d.] | Length of therapy with amphotericin B is not established. Treatment for 4–6 weeks and total of 12 months. Suppressive therapy with itraconazole is needed |
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| 5 | Disseminated sporotrichosis | Liposomal amphotericin B [3–5 mg/kg/day] and then itraconazole [200 mg b.i.d.] | Deoxycholate amphotericin B [0.7–1 mg/kg/day] until recovery and then Itraconazole [200 mg b.i.d.] | Treatment with amphotericin B until objective improvement and for at least 12 months. Suppressive therapy with itraconazole is needed |
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| 6 | Sporotrichosis in pregnant women |
Treating only severe sporotrichosis with liposomal amphotericin B [3–5 mg/kg/day] or deoxycholate amphotericin B [0.7–1 mg/kg/day]. | Preferably, defer treatment for uncomplicated cases | |
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| 7 | Sporotrichosis in children | Itraconazole [6–10 mg/kg/d or maximum of 400 mg/day] for mild disease, deoxycholate amphotericin B [0.7–1 mg/kg/day] for severe disease | SSKI with increasing doses equivalent to half the adult dose for a duration as in adults | Treating severe disease with an amphotericin B formulation |
*Modified after Kauffman et al. [65].