| Literature DB >> 35205946 |
Piyaporn Chokevittaya1, Methee Chayakulkeeree2, Wanruchada Katchamart3.
Abstract
To investigate the risk factors, clinical characteristics, management, and outcomes of musculoskeletal fungal infection in Thai patients, patients aged ≥18 years definitively diagnosed with musculoskeletal fungal infection by culture and/or histopathology at Siriraj Hospital (Bangkok, Thailand) during 2002-2020 were retrospectively enrolled. Twenty-eight patients (median age: 58.5 years [range: 22-81], 57.1% male) with fungal osteomyelitis (n = 22), septic arthritis (n = 1), or fungal osteomyelitis with septic arthritis (n = 5) were included. Immunocompromised status was common (82%). Most patients had de novo infection from hematogenous spreading that usually presented at a single, non-contiguous site. The median symptom duration prior to diagnosis was 2 months. The tibia and knee were the most common site of osteomyelitis (30%) and septic arthritis (72%), respectively. The most common pathogens were Talaromyces marneffei and Cryptococcus neoformans. Organism identification from tissues at the affected sites was required in all cases. Most patients (82%) required combination surgery and systemic antifungal therapy. Among those with complete follow-up (23/28), 61% and 39% had complete and partial responses, respectively. Musculoskeletal fungal infection is an uncommon disease with insidious onset and non-specific manifestations that requires pathogen identification via tissue cultures and histopathologic studies. Combination surgery and systemic antifungal therapy yielded generally favorable outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: clinical characteristics; management; musculoskeletal fungal infection; osteomyelitis; outcomes; risk factors; septic arthritis
Year: 2022 PMID: 35205946 PMCID: PMC8880593 DOI: 10.3390/jof8020191
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Fungi (Basel) ISSN: 2309-608X
Pathogen, site of infection, type of infection, and histopathologic findings in patients with fungal musculoskeletal infection.
| Pathogen | Site of Infection | Type of Infection | Histopathologic Report |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Skull | Osteomyelitis | Dichotomous branching septate hyphae |
|
| Skull | Osteomyelitis | Acute and chronic inflammation with presence of non |
| Rib | Osteomyelitis | Suppurative granulomatous inflammation | |
|
| Knee | Septic arthritis | Prosthetic membrane with moderate acute and chronic inflammation and histiocyte aggregation |
|
| Hip and knee | Septic arthritis | Nonspecific synovitis, negative for granuloma and malignancy |
|
| Tibia | Osteomyelitis | Prosthetic membrane with moderate acute and chronic inflammation and histiocyte aggregation |
|
| Hand | Osteomyelitis | Not available |
|
| Tibia | Osteomyelitis | Budding yeast osteomyelitis with B cell lymphoid neoplasm |
|
| Tibia | Osteomyelitis | Chronic osteomyelitis with fungal-associated chronic granulomatous inflammation suggestive of cryptococcosis |
|
| Tibia | Osteomyelitis | Cryptococcus osteomyelitis |
|
| Tibia | Osteomyelitis | Fungal-associated osteomyelitis |
| Foot | Osteomyelitis | Acute suppurative inflammation with granulomatous reaction, Gomori methenamine silver stain reviewed broad branching septate hyphae compatible with fusarium | |
| Tibia | Osteomyelitis | Branching septate hyphae suggestive of | |
| Tibia | Osteomyelitis | Acute suppurative inflammation with granulomatous reaction, Gomori methenamine silver stain reviewed broad branching septate hyphae compatible with fusarium | |
|
| Spine | Osteomyelitis | Focal necrotizing granuloma with presence of generated branching septate fungal hyphae |
| Foot | Osteomyelitis | Soft tissue with histiocyte aggregation and mild chronic inflammation | |
|
| Sinus | Osteomyelitis | Degenerated fungal hyphae with non |
|
| Foot | Osteomyelitis | Eumycotic mycetoma due to hyaline fungi |
|
| Hand | Osteomyelitis | Mixed follicular, paracortical hyperplasia, focal capsular thickening with marked plasmacytic infiltration and admixed neutrophils, eosinophiles, and histiocytes, negative for bacteria, acid-fast bacilli, spirocete, and fungi |
|
| Humerus | Osteomyelitis | Acute and chronic inflammation with granuloma tissue formation and xanthomatous reaction |
|
| Knee | Septic arthritis | Not available |
|
| Knee | Septic arthritis | Negative for organism, acute osteomyelitis and acute synovitis |
|
| Scapula and clavicle | Osteomyelitis | Chronic ulcer and granulation tissue with acute and chronic granuloma, presence of small yeast |
|
| Shoulder | Septic arthritis | Acute and chronic inflammation with granuloma tissue formation and xanthomatous reaction |
|
| Tibia | Osteomyelitis | Negative for organism |
|
| Disseminated infection, including radius bone | Osteomyelitis | Chronic osteomyelitis |
| Unidentified hyaline septate mold | Sinus | Osteomyelitis | Scattered degenerated branching septate hyphae |