Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult (673 page)

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Authors: Jeffrey J. Schaider,Adam Z. Barkin,Roger M. Barkin,Philip Shayne,Richard E. Wolfe,Stephen R. Hayden,Peter Rosen

Tags: #Medical, #Emergency Medicine

BOOK: Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult
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DESCRIPTION
  • Lymphocutaneous:
    • Most common form
    • Inoculation of fungus (
      Sporothrix schenckii
      ) into skin/soft tissue
    • Disease with or without hematogenous spread after traumatic inoculation with soil or plant material
    • Secondary to animal bites/scratches, especially from cats, trauma
    • Increased risk: Farmers, gardeners, landscapers, forestry workers
  • Pulmonary:
    • Inhalation of conidia aerosolized from soil/plant decay
    • Increased risk: Alcoholics, diabetics, COPD, steroid users
  • Multifocal extracutaneous:
    • Cutaneous inoculation and hematologic spread
    • Increased risk: HIV/immunosuppressed patients
ETIOLOGY
  • Fungal infection caused by
    S. schenckii
    :
  • Dimorphic fungus
  • Occurs as mold on decaying vegetation, moss, and soil in temperate and tropical environments
  • Animal vectors, notably cats and armadillos
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
  • Several clinical manifestations/syndromes
  • Determined by mode of inoculation and host factors
  • Lymphocutaneous:
    • Initial lesions appear days to weeks after inoculation
    • Begin as papules, become nodular, often ulcerate:
      • Distal extremities more commonly involved
      • Size: Millimeters to 4 cm
      • Pain absent or mild
      • Drainage is nonpurulent
    • Systemic symptoms usually absent
    • Secondary nodular lesions develop along lymphatics draining the original site.
    • May wax and wane over years if untreated
  • Fixed cutaneous:
    • Plaque-like or verrucous lesion at the site of inoculation (typically face and extremities)
    • Ulceration uncommon
    • Do not manifest lymphangitic progression
    • Common in endemic regions of South America
  • Extracutaneous:
    • Osteoarticular:
      • Secondary to local or hematologic inoculation
      • Septic arthritis more common than osteomyelitis
      • Joint inflammation, effusion, and pain
      • Single or multiple joint involvement of extremities: Knee, elbow, wrist, ankle
      • Indolent onset, few systemic symptoms
      • Tenosynovitis, septic arthritis, bursitis, nerve entrapment syndrome
      • Usually poor outcome due to delayed diagnosis
  • Pulmonary:
    • Syndrome resembles mycobacterial infection (TB)
    • Fever, weight loss, fatigue, night sweats
    • Productive cough, hemoptysis, dyspnea
    • Uniformly fatal if untreated
  • Multifocal extracutaneous (disseminated):
    • Low-grade fever, weight loss
    • Diffuse cutaneous lesions
    • Arthritis/osteolytic lesions/parenchymal involvement
    • Chronic lymphocytic meningitis
    • Ocular adnexa, endophthalmitis
    • Genitourinary, sinuses
    • Can be fatal if untreated
    • Often occurs in immunocompromised host
History
  • Activity with exposure to soil, moss, organic material, or to cats in endemic areas
  • Fixed cutaneous or lymphocutaneous: Healthy host
  • Disseminated/extracutaneous: Diabetics, COPD, HIV/AIDS
Physical-Exam
  • Fixed cutaneous/lymphocutaneous: Lesions found on exam
  • Disseminated: Nonspecific findings
ESSENTIAL WORKUP

Diagnosis dependent on isolation
S. schenckii
from site of infection:

  • Culture from aspirated material, tissue biopsy, or sputum
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
  • Blood tests not indicated with cutaneous disease
  • Cultures of sputum, synovial fluid, CSF, blood as indicated by extracutaneous manifestations
  • No reliable serologic assays available
Imaging
  • Pulmonary:
    • Chest radiograph reveals cavitary lesions
  • Extracutaneous/disseminated:
    • Consider bone scan in immunocompromised host.
Diagnostic Procedures/Surgery
  • Lymphocutaneous/fixed cutaneous:
    • Biopsy reveals pyogranulomatous inflammation, 3–5 mm cigar-shaped yeast
  • Pulmonary:
    • Gram stain of sputum may yield yeast; sputum cultures often positive
  • Extracutaneous/disseminated:
    • CSF reveals lymphocytic meningitis, increased protein/decreased glucose
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
  • Lymphocutaneous:
    • Leishmaniasis
    • Nocardiosis
    • Mycobacterium marinum
    • Tularemia
  • Fixed cutaneous:
    • Bacterial pyoderma
    • Foreign-body granuloma
    • Inflammatory dermatophyte infections
    • Blastomycosis
    • Mycobacteria
  • Osteoarticular:
    • Rheumatoid arthritis
    • Gout
    • Tuberculosis
    • Bacterial arthritis
    • Pigmented villonodular synovitis
  • Pulmonary and meningitis:
    • Mycobacterial infections
    • Histoplasmosis
    • Coccidioidomycosis
    • Cryptococcal disease
TREATMENT
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY

Airway/hemodynamic stabilization for severely ill patients with extracutaneous manifestations

ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
  • Lymphocutaneous/fixed cutaneous:
    • Itraconazole (drug of choice): Efficacious, but expensive and potential for hepatotoxicity, has numerous drug–drug interactions, black box in heart failure
    • Terbinafine: Less expensive alternative if failure of itraconazole, only in cutaneous disease
    • Saturated solution of potassium iodide (SSKI): Inexpensive but bitter taste and side effects (anorexia, nausea, diarrhea, fever, salivary gland swelling) lead to limited acceptability
    • Local heat therapy for cutaneous disease (>35°C) inhibits fungal growth, use in pregnant patients or others who cannot tolerate medication, therapy may take 3–6 mo
  • Pulmonary:
    • Itraconazole or amphotericin B in early disease, effective in ∼30% of cases
    • More advanced disease often requires resection plus amphotericin B
  • Osteoarticular:
    • Itraconazole: 1st-line therapy for more than 1 yr, amphotericin B if refractory
  • Disseminated:
    • Amphotericin initially
    • Itraconazole in stable, immunocompetent patients
    • HIV and sporotrichosis: Suppressive therapy with itraconazole is recommended after initial infection
MEDICATION
  • Amphotericin B: Lipid form 3–5 mg/kg daily (preferred, especially in pregnancy and peds); if using deoxycholate form (pt with no risk of renal dysfunction) 0.7–1 mg/kg daily and infuse over 2 hr
  • Itraconazole: Lymphocutaneous: 100–200 mg (peds: 6–10 mg/kg/d, max. 400 mg) PO TID for 3 days, then 100–200 mg per day for 2–4 wk after lesions resolve, pulmonary/osteoarticular: 200 mg PO TID for 3 days, then BID for 12 mo
  • SSKI: 5 drop (peds: 1 drop) in water or juice TID; increase by 5 drops per dose each week up to a max. 40–50 drops TID (peds: max. of 1 drop/kg) as tolerated, for 6–12 wk or until lesions resolve
  • Terbinafine: Lymphocutaneous only: 250–500 mg PO per day for 2–4 wk after lesions healed
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
  • Systemic signs/symptoms
  • Pulmonary, CNS, multifocal disease
  • Immunosuppressed host with disseminated disease
Discharge Criteria

Lymphocutaneous/fixed cutaneous form, nontoxic

Issues for Referral

Infectious disease consultant as appropriate

FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS

Infectious disease specialist, dermatology, appropriate specialist given disease involvement (orthopedics, neurology)

PEARLS AND PITFALLS

Fixed cutaneous, lymphocutaneous, pulmonary, extracutaneous/disseminated disease secondary to
S. schenckii
:

  • Inoculation with soil, moss, or organic material (skin break or inhalation)
  • Contact with cats
  • Healthy hosts develop fixed cutaneous/lymphocutaneous disease, immunocompromised hosts develop extracutaneous/disseminated disease
  • Disseminated disease presents with nonspecific symptoms that often result in delayed diagnosis and poor outcome.
  • Oral itraconazole is 1st-line therapy except for disseminated disease, where amphotericin is used initially
ADDITIONAL READING
  • Barros MB, de Almeida Paes R, Schubach AO. Sporothrix schenckii and Sporotrichosis.
    Clin Microbiol Rev
    . 2011;24:633–654.
  • Francesconi G, Valle AC, Passos S, et al. Terbinafine (250 mg/day): An effective and safe treatment of cutaneous sporotrichosis.
    J Eur Acad Dermatol Venereol
    . 2009;23:1273–1276.
  • Freitas DF, do Valle AC, de Almeida Paes R, et al. Zoonotic sporotrichosis in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil: A protracted epidemic yet to be curbed.
    Clin Infect Dis
    . 2010;50:453.
  • Kauffman CA, Bustamante B, Chapman SW, et al. Clinical practice guidelines for the management of sporotrichosis: 2007 update by the Infectious Diseases Society of America.
    Clin Infect Dis
    . 2007;45:1255–1265.
  • Tiwari A, Malani AN. Primary pulmonary sporotrichosis: Case report and review of the literature.
    Infect Dis Clin Prac.
    2012;20:25.

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