Article

Disseminated Cutaneous Sporotrichosis Treated With Itraconazole

Author and Disclosure Information

A 72-year-old Hispanic man with diabetes presented with a 4-week history of a tender nonhealing ulcer on the fifth digit of the left hand and a 3-day history of fever, chills, malaise, anorexia, and tender fluctuant nodules on the abdomen and left elbow. The patient, an avid gardener, was using prednisone and methotrexate for a debilitating seronegative polyarthropathy. A diagnosis of disseminated cutaneous sporotrichosis was made based on epidemiologic risk factors, clinical appearance, histopathologic examination, and a positive fungal culture. Use of prednisone was discontinued, the dosage of methotrexate was decreased, and use of oral itraconazole 400 mg/day was instituted. The patient's lesions cleared within 5 months, and no recurrence was noted during a 3-month follow-up. This case illustrates the typical association of the rare entity of disseminated cutaneous sporotrichosis with immunosuppression, an unusual lack of internal involvement, and a gratifying response to itraconazole.


 

Recommended Reading

Open Your Mouth [editorial]
MDedge Dermatology
What Is Your Diagnosis? Huntley's Papules (Diabetic Finger Pebbling)
MDedge Dermatology
Congenital Triangular Alopecia: A Case Report and Review
MDedge Dermatology
What's Eating You? Latrodectus mactans (The Black Widow Spider)
MDedge Dermatology
Pyoderma Faciale: Gram-negative Recovery by Means of Needle Aspiration
MDedge Dermatology
Bullae and Sweat Gland Necrosis After an Alcoholic Deep Slumber
MDedge Dermatology
Henoch-Schönlein Purpura Secondary to Subacute Bacterial Endocarditis
MDedge Dermatology
An Epidemicity of Paederus Species in the Çukurova Region
MDedge Dermatology
Linear Porokeratosis With Underlying Bony Abnormalities
MDedge Dermatology
Comment on "Body Odor in Dermatologic Diagnosis" (Cutis. 1999;63:107-111)[letter]
MDedge Dermatology