| Literature DB >> 29460742 |
Céline Nourrisson, Magali Vidal-Roux, Sophie Cayot, Christine Jacomet, Charlotte Bothorel, Albane Ledoux-Pilon, Fanny Anthony-Moumouni, Olivier Lesens1, Philippe Poirier1.
Abstract
We report 2 new cases of invasive infections caused by Nannizziopsis spp. molds in France. Both patients had cerebral abscesses and were immunocompromised. Both patients had recently spent time in Africa.Entities:
Keywords: Nannizziopsis; central nervous system fungal infection; emerging disease; fungi; immunocompromised patients; invasive fungal infection; molds; opportunistic fungal pathogen
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29460742 PMCID: PMC5823334 DOI: 10.3201/eid2403.170772
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Characteristics of Nannizziopsis sp. infection in humans*
| Year (reference) | Age, y/sex | Country | Underlying condition or context | Species | Localization | Positive samples | Treatment | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2017 (this study) | 52/F | France | HIV, living in Mali | Brain abscess | Cerebral biopsy, CSF | AmpB for 1 mo, then VCZ | Recovery but neurologic sequela after 2 mo | |
| 2015 (this study) | 63/F | France | Leukemia, recent travel to Senegal |
| Brain abscess | Blood culture, CSF, ascites fluid | Not treated
(death before diagnosis) | Death before diagnosis |
| 2005 ( | 38/M | Germany | HIV, travel to Nigeria |
| Brain abscess | Needle aspiration of brain lesion | VCZ | Recovery without sequelae after 4 mo |
| 2005 ( | 40/M | United States | HIV |
| Lung | Bronchial washing | Not treated,
considered as a contaminant | Recovery after treatment of CMV infection |
| 2000 ( | 32/M | United States | Travel to Nigeria |
| Lymph nodes, heart, lungs, spleen, kidneys | 3 lymph nodes | ITRA for 2 y | NA |
| 1994 ( | NA/M | United States | HIV |
| Right thigh mass | Deep muscle mass on the right thigh, right groin, buttock, and lung | ITRA | Death after 8 mo |
| 1982 ( | 24/M | United States | Travel to Africa |
| Abscess in right ankle, osteomyelitis | 2 biopsies of abscess in tibia | AmpB for 4 mo | Recovery after 4 mo |
*AmpB, amphotericin B; CMV, cytomegalovirus; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; ITRA, itraconazole; NA, not available; VCZ, voriconazole.
FigureDiagnostic testing of a 52-year-old woman from France living in Mali who had Nannizziopsis spp. fungal infection. A) Thoracic-abdominal-pelvic scan shows pseudo-nodular lesions in the apex of the right lung, of which one is excavated. B) Cerebral computed tomography scan shows contrast enhancement on several hemispheric nodules on the left and in frontal, parietal, and temporal regions, responsible for large surrounding edema and compression of the left lateral ventricle. The median line is deviated to the right with a subfalcorial herniation. C) Hematoxylin-eosin-saffron stain of brain biopsy containing mononuclear inflammatory infiltrates; giant cell granulomas; histiocytes, sometimes with an epithelioid appearance; and neutrophils (original magnification ×200). D) Grocott stain showing thick bulbous mycelial filaments in the cytoplasm of certain giant cells/histiocytes (original magnification ×600). Round shapes correspond to cross-sections of bulbous territories.