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. 1985 Sep;1(3):160-5.
doi: 10.1007/BF00234089.

Imported paracoccidioidomycosis: a public health problem in non-endemic areas

Imported paracoccidioidomycosis: a public health problem in non-endemic areas

L Ajello et al. Eur J Epidemiol. 1985 Sep.

Erratum in

  • Eur J Epidemiol 1986 Mar;2(1):81

Abstract

Diagnosis of paracoccidioidomycosis in an immigrant who had returned to Italy following a long sojourn in Venezuela prompted a review of imported cases of this Latin American disease in nonendemic countries. Forty-two such instances of well-documented paracoccidioidomycosis were complied. Among these, eleven individuals had arrived in nonendemic countries with active symptomatic infections, fifteen others were first suspected of having tuberculosis, and four each were considered to have blastomycosis caused by Blastomyces dermatitidis and carcinomas. Three individuals were considered to have Wegener's granulomatosis or blastomycosis. Two other patients were treated for syphilis before being diagnosed as having paracoccidioidomycosis. A striking feature of most of these cases was the long asymptomatic period following initial infection. The dormant periods ranged form four months to 60 years with an average duration of 14 years. The need to question patients about travel to or residency in foreign countries is emphasized, along with the necessity to include the mycoses in differential diagnoses. Three reported cases, all from Africa with no history of travel to the endemic areas of the New World, were considered to be doubtful. In one of these, Russell bodies apparently had been mistaken for the tissue-form cells of Paracoccidioides brasiliensis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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