Research Keyword: granuloma formation

Consecutive non-Aspergillus Fungal Invasive Infections in Chronic Granulomatous Disease: Data from the French National Reference Center for Primary ImmunoDeficiencies and literature review

This study examines rare but serious fungal infections in patients with chronic granulomatous disease, a genetic immune disorder. Researchers analyzed 122 cases of non-Aspergillus fungal infections from French hospitals and published literature, finding that these infections often occur despite preventive antifungal medications and are challenging to diagnose. The infections were found in the lungs most commonly but could spread to bones, brain, and other organs, with treatments including antifungal drugs, surgery, and in some cases bone marrow transplants.

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Primary cutaneous mixed infection with Cryptococcus uniguttulatus and Mycobacterium tuberculosis

A 43-year-old man had a persistent facial rash that didn’t improve with standard antifungal treatments. Doctors initially found a fungal infection called Cryptococcus uniguttulatus using culture tests. However, advanced molecular testing (DNA sequencing) revealed he also had a tuberculosis infection in the same skin lesion. Once both infections were treated with appropriate medications, the patient’s rash finally improved. This case shows that sometimes people can have multiple infections at the same location and that newer diagnostic methods are important for finding these hidden infections.

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