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.
Images library
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Scanning electron micrograph of Aspergillus ochraceopetaliformis conidial heads
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Image D & E. A case of onychomycosis associated with Aspergillus ochraceopetaliformis as described in Nail infection by Aspergillus ochraceopetaliformis. Med Mycol. 2009 Mar 9:1-5, 2009, Brasch J, Varga J, Jensen JM, Egberts F & Tintelnot K
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Further details
Image 5. Oral itraconazole pulse therapy was given to the patient (200 mg twice daily for 1 week, with 3 weeks off between successive pulses, for four pulses) and treatment was successful.
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This patient was 28 yr old with adult lymphocytic leukaemia. She received induction chemotherapy and this infection developed 2 days after recovering from neutropenia.
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Close-up image of the lesion on the left thigh showing a mat of hyphae over the wound.
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Eosinophilic mucin with A. flavus in the nasal cavity. Irregular crust of 2.5 cm from a patient diagnosed as allergic fungal sinusitis. Patient with allergic fungal sinusitis
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GMS stain of eosinophilic mucin reveals a darkly stained dichotomously branched A. flavus hyphae within cellular background. Patient with allergic fungal sinusitis