We report a patient with granulomatous mycosis fungoides (MF) that progressed to a tumoral pattern and finally developed clinical pulmonary and thyroid involvement, despite multiple and intensive treatments. We emphasize the visceral involvement in this case, which was manifest as dyspnoea simulating pneumonia and by palpable thyroid nodules. These features are very unusual even in classic MF, and this is the first case in our knowledge of thyroid involvement in granulomatous MF.
Visceral leishmaniasis is a protozoan infection that may complicate the course of patients with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Dermatofibroma is a cutaneous fibrohistiocytic lesion considered neoplastic by some authors and inflammatory by others. Eruptive dermatofibromas have been described in patients with HIV infection or with other altered immunity situations. We present the case of a 32-year-old, HIV-positive man with visceral leishmaniasis who complained of the appearance of a cutaneous lesion in the leg formed by the coexistence of dermatofibroma and Leishmania parasitic colonization. As far as we know, this type of association has not been reported previously. We consider that the dermatofibroma could have developed as an unusual form of fibrohistiocytic reaction to leishmania. From a practical approach, we recommend the search of leishmaniasis in dermatofibroma in immunosuppressed patients.
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