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Query: UMLS:C0010200 (cough)
23,843 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A case of disseminated cryptococcosis in an HIV-negative patient presenting with cutaneous lesions is described for the first time in Egypt. The patient, a 16-year-old male, presented with cough, expectoration, loss of weight, and cutaneous lesions, mainly on the face and trunk. The lesions consisted of vegetating crusted plaques discharging purulent to sanguinous fluid and flattened, shiny, erythematous to brownish plaques. Anorexia, headache and personality changes soon followed. Histopathological examination of lesions was highly suggestive of a deep mycosis, particularly cryptococcosis. The fulminant disease advanced with central nervous system involvement. The progression was not arrested when systemic antifungal therapy was administered late in the disease course. Pathological examination of lungs, liver, pancreas and spleen revealed disseminated infection with no evidence of other underlying pathology. Disseminated cryptococcosis is a morbid infection, rare in an area where heightened awareness and raised index of suspicion will surely allow earlier diagnosis, management and better prognosis.
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PMID:Disseminated cryptococcosis with cutaneous lesions. 893 33

Disseminated cryptococcosis is a rare and often fatal disease in children. The majority of cases usually occur in individuals with defective cell-mediated immunity, most commonly due to HIV infection. The authors here in report an 8-year-old girl from Nepal who presented with fever, cough, headache, lymphadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly and cutaneous lesions. Lymph node biopsy revealed multiple granulomas composed of histiocytes and epitheliold cells along with numerous yeast forms of cryptococcus. Cultures of CSF, sputum and urine yielded cryptococcus neoformans. Surprisingly,the immune function in terms of T-cell number, CD4 : CD8 ratio, serum immunoglobulins and HIV serology was normal. After the diagnosis of disseminated cryptococcosis was established, the patient was treated with 5-fluorocytosine (100 mg/kg/day) for initial two weeks and amphotericin B (1 mg/kg/day) for 13 weeks. Patient responded well to the treatment with disappearance of presenting symptoms, cutaneous lesions, and lymphadenopathy, though she still had hepatosplenomegaly, which also decreased. Unfortunately, she developed loss of vision in 10th week of therapy. The patient was discharged on oral fluconazole (6 mg/kg/day) and no recurrence was found during the follow-up period of more than 9 months. This is the first case of disseminated cryptococcosis with no detectable immune deficit, from India.
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PMID:Disseminated infection with Cryptococcus neoformans var neoformans in an 8 years immunocompetent girl. 1568 60

Disseminated cryptococcosis is rare in immunocompetent hosts and hepatic manifestations as the presenting feature is further rare. We report a case of disseminated cryptococcosis with hepatic involvement as an initial manifestation in a previously healthy, immunocompetent adult. A young married female presented with progressive jaundice, anorexia, weightloss, cough with expectoration, and hepatosplenomegaly. Biochemical profile showed liver function derangement with increased transaminases, alkaline phosphatase, bilirubin with deranged coagulation assay, and decreased albumin. The patient was treated initially for disseminated tuberculosis with associated sepsis, but she succumbed on the third day. Diagnosis of cryptococcosis was made on the basis of sputum culture, serology, and liver histopathology.
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PMID:Disseminated cryptococcosis with hepatic dysfuction as the initial manifestation in an immunocompetent adult. 2364 46

Disseminated cryptococcosis usually develops in immunosuppressed patients. A 33-year-old postpartum woman developed disseminated cryptococcosis with marked eosinophilia. She presented with a cough and a week-long fever. A computed tomography scan showed multiple pulmonary nodules randomly distributed. Eosinophils were observed to have increased in number in both her peripheral blood and bronchoalveolar lavage fluid. A transbronchial lung biopsy and cerebrospinal fluid specimens revealed findings consistent with cryptococcal infection. Disseminated cryptococcosis can present with marked eosinophilia of the peripheral blood and lung tissues. Additionally, the postpartum immune status may sometimes be involved in the development of opportunistic infections in previously healthy women.
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PMID:Disseminated Cryptococcosis with Marked Eosinophilia in a Postpartum Woman. 2902 82