“…The manifestations appear between 10 and 15 days after exposure to the fungus, and the intensity of the symptoms depends directly on the infective load, ranging from the flu to a severe, nonspecific respiratory infection, accompanied by high fever, chest pain and cough with or without expectoration, as well as by general symptoms or allergic manifestations, particularly erythema nodosum [20]. Primary pulmonary coccidioidomycosis generally resolves spontaneously within 30-60 days, even without antifungal treatment, and patients retain lifelong immunity to exogenous infection [20,21]. In contrast, people with compromised immune systems such as patients with lymphoma, organ transplants or AIDS are more likely to develop severe pneumonia and disseminated infection [11,12,22,23] and particularly susceptible to chronic forms of pulmonary disease [24,25].…”