Tropical Fungal Infections

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Tropical Fungal Infections - Hot & Humid Horrors

  • Endemic mycoses in tropical/subtropical regions.
  • Etiology: Traumatic implantation of saprophytic fungi (soil, decaying vegetation).
  • Risk factors: Barefoot walking, agricultural work, minor trauma, humidity, poverty.
  • Common types (subcutaneous):
    • Mycetoma
    • Chromoblastomycosis
    • Sporotrichosis
  • General: Chronic, insidious onset, often difficult to treat.

⭐ Mycetoma is characterized by the triad of tumefaction, draining sinuses, and grains/granules.

Mycetoma - Foot's Fungal Fortress

Chronic, suppurative, granulomatous infection of subcutaneous tissues, fascia, bone. 📌 Mycetoma Triad: Tumor (painless subcutaneous tumefaction), Sinuses (multiple), Grains (discharged colonies).

Madura foot with discharging sinuses and grains

  • Types & Etiology:
    • Eumycetoma (Fungal):
      • Madurella mycetomatis (most common, black grains).
      • Aspergillus, Fusarium (pale grains).
    • Actinomycetoma (Bacterial, filamentous):
      • Nocardia brasiliensis, Actinomadura madurae (yellow/white/red grains). Clinically similar.
  • Diagnosis: Clinical; grain examination (color, microscopy); imaging (X-ray 'dot-in-circle' sign); culture; biopsy.
  • Management:
    • Eumycetoma: Itraconazole / Voriconazole + surgical debridement. Often resistant.
    • Actinomycetoma: Welsh regimen (Amikacin + Co-trimoxazole). Good response.

Madurella mycetomatis is the most common cause of eumycetoma worldwide.

Chromoblastomycosis - Cauliflower Calamity

  • Definition: Chronic localized fungal infection of skin & subcutaneous tissue.
  • Etiology: Dematiaceous (pigmented) fungi.
    • Fonsecaea pedrosoi (most common).
    • Phialophora verrucosa.
    • Cladophialophora carrionii.
  • Clinical Features:
    • Slow-growing verrucous (warty), cauliflower-like plaques/nodules.
    • Often on lower extremities.
    • 'Black dots' (hemorrhagic points) on surface. Chromoblastomycosis: Verrucous lesions on foot and leg
  • Histopathology:
    • Sclerotic bodies (Medlar bodies / copper pennies / muriform cells): thick-walled, pigmented, septate fungal cells. 📌 Chromo = Copper pennies (Medlar bodies). Sclerotic bodies in chromoblastomycosis

    ⭐ Sclerotic bodies (Medlar bodies or copper pennies) are pathognomonic for Chromoblastomycosis.

  • Diagnosis: Clinical presentation, KOH microscopy, skin biopsy (revealing sclerotic bodies), fungal culture.
  • Management: Difficult; often requires combination therapy.
    • Systemic antifungals: Itraconazole, Terbinafine.
    • Local therapies: Cryotherapy, heat therapy (e.g., topical 5-FU + heat), surgical excision for small lesions.

Sporotrichosis - Thorny Trouble Trail

  • Etiology: Sporothrix schenckii (dimorphic fungus).
  • Transmission: "Rose Gardener's Disease" (thorn pricks); zoonotic (cats).
    • 📌 Sporo-THRIX on a thorn, follows a lymph TRIX (track).
  • Clinical Forms:
    • Lymphocutaneous (commonest): Chancre at inoculation → linear nodules along lymphatics ("sporotrichoid spread").
    • Fixed Cutaneous: Solitary, chronic lesion; no lymphatic spread.
  • Diagnosis:
    • Culture (Gold Standard): Yeast at $37^\circ C$, mold at $25^\circ C$.
    • Biopsy: Cigar-shaped yeasts; asteroid bodies (Splendore-Hoeppli).
  • Management:
    • Cutaneous/Lymphocutaneous: Itraconazole (DOC). SSKI (alternative).
    • Disseminated: Amphotericin B, then Itraconazole.

Exam Favourite: "Sporotrichoid spread" (lymphatic) is characteristic but also seen in Nocardiosis, Leishmaniasis, atypical Mycobacteria.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Tinea imbricata: T. concentricum causes concentric, scaly rings ("Tokelau").
  • Lobomycosis: Lacazia loboi leads to keloidal, verrucous nodules; microscopy shows "chain-of-coins" yeast.
  • Chromoblastomycosis: Dematiaceous fungi (e.g., Fonsecaea) cause cauliflower-like lesions; histology shows sclerotic bodies (copper pennies).
  • Mycetoma: Characterized by tumefaction, draining sinuses, and grains; distinguish eumycetoma (fungal) from actinomycetoma.
  • Sporotrichosis: Sporothrix schenckii causes lymphocutaneous spread ("rose gardener's disease"); asteroid bodies on histology.
  • Rhinosporidiosis: R. seeberi presents as friable, strawberry-like nasal/ocular polyps; large sporangia with endospores.

Practice Questions: Tropical Fungal Infections

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Which of the following is NOT a fungal infection?

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Flashcards: Tropical Fungal Infections

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Most common form of tinea unguium is _____ onychomycosis (DLSO)

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Most common form of tinea unguium is _____ onychomycosis (DLSO)

distal and lateral subungual

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