Blastomycosis (North American Blastomycosis) | Figure 4.31 A: Histoplasma capsulatum, tuberculate macroconidium (Courtesy of Sandra Arduin, Michigan Department of Community Health) B: Histoplasmosis* C: Blastomyces dermatitidis* *Courtesy of Dr. Paul Getz |
| Figure 4.32 A: Blastomycosis* B: Blastomycosis* *Courtesy of Dr. Paul Getz C: Paracoccidiodes brasiliensis (Courtesy of CDC, Dr. Lucille Georg) |
(Figures 4.31C and 4.32A, B) - Blastomyces dermatitidis, endemic in Great Lakes, Ohio river basin, and Mississippi river; found mainly in soil
- Two types:
- Primary pulmonary infection: typically asymptomatic or self-limited, can turn into chronic pulmonary (mimics TB or pneumonia), 80% cases with dissemination to skin
- Cutaneous infection: typically due to secondary cutaneous dissemination after pulmonary infection and variable presentation: papulopustules, well-demarcated verrucous plaques with crusting and pustules especially at border, ± central ulceration, healing begins centrally and heals with cribriform scarring
- Histology: round yeast forms with broad-based budding (8–15 µm), thick double-contoured wall, giant cells, and neutrophilic abscesses
- Culture: white fluffy colony at 25°C; yeast cell with double-contoured thick walls, broad base, and typical single budding at 37°C; conidia on conidiophores resembling lollipops
- Treatment: oral antifungal (itraconazole, ketoconazole), if severe or progressive use amphotericin B
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