“…Although isolated lymphadenopathy is more common in acute cases of the disease, our patient has epidemiological data on the chronic and most common form of the disease (74 to 96%) with slow and progressive clinical evolution pattern (1,3,9). The clinical condition is commonly associated with significant weight loss (72%), asthenia (65%), mucocutaneous pallor (62%), fever (51%), cough (50%), dysphonia, dysphagia, odynophagia, and in lower frequency, ulcerations in the mouth and throat (9). The main sites of involvement are the lungs (90%), the skin and mucous membranes, the lymph nodes, with lymph node enlargement (79%), and, less frequently, adrenals (50%), and digestive, bone (20%) and central nervous (25%) systems (1,2,9).…”