Affiliations 

  • 1 Infectious Diseases Unit, Department of Medicine, Hospital Sultanah Bahiyah, Alor Setar 05460, Malaysia
  • 2 Infectious Diseases Research Center, Institute for Medical Research, National Institutes of Health, Kuala Lumpur 50588, Malaysia
Infect Dis Rep, 2023 Feb 03;15(1):102-111.
PMID: 36826351 DOI: 10.3390/idr15010011

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Sporotrichosis is a subacute or chronic mycosis caused by a dimorphic fungus of the genus Sporothrix. Zoonotic-transmitted sporotrichosis has become a major public health concern and is characterised by a different clinical pattern from the traditional epidemiology of sporotrichosis.

CASE PRESENTATION: We present the details of four patients with mucosal sporotrichosis with regional lymphadenopathy (three cases of granulomatous conjunctivitis and one case of nasal sporotrichosis). The patients' age range was between 23 to 46 years old and their gender was three female and one male patient. All four patients shared the same ethnicity, Malay, and they had a common history of owning domestic cats as pets. Sporothrix schenckii were isolated from all the culture samples and its antifungal susceptibility patterns were compared in the mycelial and yeast phases. All four patients recovered with oral itraconazole treatment, but the treatment duration was variable among patients.

CONCLUSIONS: People who have a history of contact with domestic cats should be aware of the possibility of sporotrichosis infection. It can present in cutaneous, lymphocutaneous, disseminated, or systemic forms. Early treatment and the prevention of disease progression are more beneficial to patients. The published data concludes that antifungal treatment is highly efficacious, although the reported treatment duration is variable.

* Title and MeSH Headings from MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.