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:: year 7, Issue 30 (3-2016) ::
3 2016, 7(30): 35-39 Back to browse issues page
Dematiaceous Fungi: Clinical Aspects – Mycetoma (6)
Mohammad Ghahri
Imam Hossein University, Tehran, Iran
Abstract:   (11929 Views)

Mycetoma, also reffered to as “Madura foot” or “Maduromycosis” is a chronic infection involving cutaneous and subcutaneous tissues that is characterized by draining sinuses that extrude masses of the infecting organism termed “granules”, “grains” or “sclerotia”. Mycetoma may be caused either by a fungus (eumycotic mycetoma) or by aerobic actinomycetes (actinomycotic mycetoma),only the former will be disscusedin this manuscript.

Although cases of eumycotic mycetoma have been reported in essentially a worldwide distribution, infection rates are highest in tropical and subtropicalcountries.Particularly high rates are reported from the Sudan, India,Pakistan, Somalia, and parts of South America. The organisms responsible for causing disease can vary dramatically from region to region.Infection results from traumatic inoculation of soil fungi into the skin, usually with a thorn or other foreign object. Approximately 70 percent of mycetoma cases involve the foot and 15 percent affect hands, but any part of the body can be involved, this distribution reflects the relative frequency of trauma at these anatomic sites.

Patients usually present for medical attention months to years after the inciting traumatic event. The clinical hallmarks of mycetoma are swelling, draining sinuses, and granules, which are microcolonies of the etiologic agent that are extruded through the sinuses. The primary lesion consists of a small nontender subcutaneous nodule, which may develop up to years after the inciting traumatic event. The lesion gradually enlarges, becomes softer, and ruptures to the surface forming sinus tracts, while at the same time also spreading to simultaneously involve deeper tissues. Al least several monthes required for the formation of sinus tracts in eumycotic mycetoma.

An appropriate therapeutic approach requires that mycetoma be distinguished from botryomycosis (an infection process that may be clinically similar, that is caused by certain species of bacteria) and pseudomycetoma, “an unusual form of dermatophyte infection. The differential diagnosis also may include sporotrichosis, chromoblastomycosis, and yaws, depending on the geographic location.

Keywords: Mycetoma, Eumycotic Mycetoma, Pheohyphomycet, Dematiaceous Fungi, Granule, Sinus Tracts
Full-Text [PDF 497 kb]   (3680 Downloads)    
Type of Study: Applicable | Subject: قارچ شناسی
Received: 2016/03/26 | Accepted: 2016/03/26 | Published: 2016/03/26
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Ghahri M. Dematiaceous Fungi: Clinical Aspects – Mycetoma (6). 3 2016; 7 (30) :35-39
URL: http://labdiagnosis.ir/article-1-148-en.html


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year 7, Issue 30 (3-2016) Back to browse issues page
Laboratory and Diagnosis
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