Date: 26 November 2013
renal transplant patient
Copyright:
Kindly provided by Iván Solano Leiva, Infectious Diseases MD, Instituto Salvadoreno del Seguro Social, El Salvador.
Notes:
A 54 yr old male patient who underwent a renal transplant one year earlier. The patient noticed a lesion on left plantar region, it was not painful but was slowly enlarging (over 9 months). In the latter 3 months the lesion became slightly purulent. Multiple cycles of antibiotics gave no improvemnt. Culture of the discharge produced Aspergillus niger. The final diagnosis of this patient was Aspergillus osteomyelitis. The patient was treated with voriconazole orally 200 mg twice daily.
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Aspergillosis in the coral sea fan Gorgonia ventalina. Sea fan coral Gorgonia ventalina, Florida Keys, USA. Depth ~5 metres, showing a lesion surrounded by a band of purple tissue. Central areas of the lesion are devoid of coral tissue revealing the underlying axial skeleton. The purple areas are devoid of coral polyps and result from the increased production of purple sclerites (small, non-fused, carbonate skeletal elements). The purpled area also indicates the location of high fungal hyphal density and el
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Aspergillosis in the coral sea fan Gorgonia ventalina. In the Caribbean ond offshore USA the sea fan coral species Gorgonia ventalina is undergoing an epizootic due to Aspergillus sydowii infection. This species of Aspergillus is also known to be associated with food contamination and for opportunistic infection in humans.Taken in San Salvador, Bahamas. Bar represents 5cm. This sea fan was heavily colonized by algae.A -tumours and galls B -lesion C -purplingGalls are composed of axial skeleton and scl