Background A 53-year-old man presented with an acute bilateral posterior uveitis with extensive necrotizing retinochoroiditis but without chorioretinal scarring. A thorough workup did not reveal any underlying disease. The possibilities of atypical ocular toxoplasmosis as well as herpetic retinal necrosis were considered and specific therapy instituted, with little improvement. The patient died within two months as result of an undifferentiated squamous cell carcinoma. Methods Histopathological examination, immunohistochemistry and multi-locus polymerase chain reaction confirmed T. gondii infection of the retina Results Macroscopic examination of enucleated globe showed extensive retinal necrosis and vitreous detachment. Histological examination of retinal tissue identified numerous round–to-elliptical toxoplasmic cysts within the retina, with retinal necrosis and minimal choroidal inflammation. Immunohistochemical analyses confirmed the cysts were due to Toxoplasma gondii. DNA extracted from formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue sections was subjected to multi-locus PCR analysis at the following typing loci: SAG1, SAG2, SAG3, SAG4, B1, NTS2, GRA6, and GRA7. DNA sequencing of positive PCR products at the NTS2, SAG1, and GRA7 loci confirmed the presence of a non-archetypal strain of T. gondii infecting the eye of the patient experiencing a severe, atypical ocular toxoplasmosis Conclusion A highly divergent, non-archetypal strain of Toxoplasma gondii was responsible for causing a severe, atypical bilateral retinochoroiditis in a patient from Brazil.
Phyma is the last stage of rosacea and is due to chronic inflammation and edema. It can affect nose (rhinophyma), chin (gnatophyma), forehead (metophyma), ears (otophyma) and eyelids (blepharophyma). Rhinophyma is the most frequent location and there are few reports about gnatophyma. We report the case of a female patient, 41 years old, who had an infiltrated, erythematous, edematous plaque around the chin and lower lip for two years. Histopathology showed perivascular lymphocytic infiltrate, hypertrophied follicles and sebaceous glands, dilated vessels and fibrosis. She was treated with oral tetracycline, oral ivermectin and metronidazole cream with a satisfactory response. The clinical, histopathological and therapeutic response correlation confirmed the diagnosis of gnatophyma, a rare variant of phyma.
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