Limited time75% off all plans
Get the app

Tropical Fungal Infections

Tropical Fungal Infections

Tropical Fungal Infections

On this page

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.

Continue reading on Oncourse

Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.

CONTINUE READING — FREE

or get the app

Rezzy — Oncourse's AI Study Mate

Have doubts about this lesson?

Ask Rezzy, your AI Study Mate, to explain anything you didn't understand

Enjoying this lesson?

Get full access to all lessons, practice questions, and more.

START FOR FREE