Abstract. Disseminated sporotrichosis occurs in individuals with impaired cellular immunity, such as in cases of neoplasia, transplantation, diabetes, and especially, acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. This report presents a 32-year-old Brazilian human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected patient who developed a protracted condition of disseminated sporotrichosis with endocarditis, bilateral endophthalmitis, and lymphatic involvement. He needed cardiac surgery to replace the mitral valve. Sporothrix brasiliensis isolates were recovered from cultures of subcutaneous nodules and mitral valve fragments. Species identification was based on classical and molecular methods. The patient received amphotericin B for 52 days and subsequently, oral itraconazole. He remains asymptomatic, and he is on maintenance therapy with itraconazole. Despite his positive clinical outcome, he developed bilateral blindness. To our knowledge, this case is the first report of endocarditis and endophthalmitis caused by S. brasiliensis.
The cases of five patients with unusual manifestations of acute schistosomiasis mansoni are described in this paper. One patient developed skin lesions, three displayed diverse lung involvement, and one presented pyogenic liver abscesses caused by Staphylococcus aureus.
We describe the finding of unizoic cysts of Isospora belli in lymphoid tissues of a Brazilian patient with AIDS, and discuss the possibilities of their drug resistance, they being the cause of relapses, and of being an indication for the existence of intermediary or paratenic animal hosts.
Reports on abdominal ultrasound studies in patients with acute schistosomiasis are still scarce and limited data are available on structural changes of the liver parenchyma in this stage of the disease. 26 patients with acute schistosomiasis mansoni were submitted to clinical and ultrasound examination. For ultrasound comparison, each acute patient was paired by age, gender, weight and height to a non-infected individual. Ultrasound showed a non-specific homogeneous size increase of the liver, and spleen in all acute patients, and easily identified intraabdominal lymph nodes in the periportal region in most cases. Three out of the five patients with periportal thickening underwent percutaneous liver biopsy. Periportal thickening disappeared 6 months after treatment for schistosomiasis. 24 months after successful treatment there was involution of the liver and spleen; lymph nodes, although reduced in size, were still easily recognized. Liver biopsy showed dense inflammatory infiltration of neutrophils, macrophages and eosinophils in the portal tracts associated with discrete fibrous tissue formation.
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