Coccidioidomycosis (San Joaquin Valley Fever)

(Figure 4.30B, C)
  • Coccidioides immitis, found in soil of southwestern USA
  • Spherules have unencapsulated thick refractile wall
  • Infectious arthroconidia inhaled via dust particles
  • Types of presentation
    • Pulmonary : inhalation of infectious arthroconidia → 40% patients with flu-like symptoms, hilar adenopathy, pulmonary infiltrate, erythema nodosum (favorable prognostic sign)
    • Disseminated: <1% cases; targets joints, viscera, brain, skin (pink papules or deep-seated nodules frequently involving face)
    • Cutaneous: very rare, due to inoculation; indurated nodule that may ulcerate with sporotrichoid pattern
  • Histology: spherules with double refractile, thick walls (20–80 µm) loaded with endospores; diagnostic arthrospores with colony growth showing septate hyphae with infectious, thick-walled barrel-shaped arthroconidia separated by clear spaces (remnants of empty cells)
  • Treatment: oral itraconazole, ketoconazole, or fluconazole
   
 
Spherules smaller than sporangia in Rhinosporidiosis
 
   

   
 
In HIV, lesions may resemble molluscum contagiosum
 
   

Figure 4.30 A: Sporothrix schenckii (Courtesy of Sandra Arduin, Michigan Department of Community Health) B: Coccidioidomycosis* C: Coccidioidomycosis* *Courtesy of Dr. Paul Getz
Figure 4.30
A: Sporothrix schenckii
(Courtesy of Sandra Arduin,
Michigan Department of
Community Health
)
B: Coccidioidomycosis*
C: Coccidioidomycosis*
*Courtesy of Dr. Paul Getz