Detection of antibody-coated Mucor in skin biopsy by direct immunofluorescence.
Ashley A BrentOlivia M ChenMilad EshaqLori LoweMay P ChanPublished in: Journal of cutaneous pathology (2023)
Cutaneous mucormycosis may be caused by direct inoculation or hematogenous spread of mucormycetes in immunocompromised patients. Skin biopsy is characterized by a deep fungal infection with frequent angioinvasion. The fungal hyphae can usually be identified on H&E stain. We report a case of cutaneous angioinvasive mucormycosis in which the fungi were also visualized on direct immunofluorescence. A 57-year-old patient with relapsed myelodysplastic syndrome status-post allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplant, diabetes mellitus, and graft-versus-host disease presented with painful, palpable, dark-red to violaceous retiform purpuric plaques. Light microscopy of punch biopsy revealed numerous broad, ribbon-like, pauci-septate hyphae in the dermis with angioinvasion, consistent with mucormycosis. Direct immunofluorescence performed on a concurrent biopsy to exclude immune complex vasculitis showed smooth IgG, IgA (weak), IgM (faint), and C3 deposition on the hyphal structures, compatible with antibody-coated fungi. Tissue culture subsequently confirmed Mucor species. Although mucormycosis was readily diagnosable on routine light microscopy in this case, recognition of the unique phenomenon of antibody-coated fungi can be crucial when the invasive fungi are sparse or only present in the direct immunofluorescence specimen.
Keyphrases
- ultrasound guided
- fine needle aspiration
- end stage renal disease
- high resolution
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- bone marrow
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- chronic kidney disease
- acute lymphoblastic leukemia
- stem cell transplantation
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- ejection fraction
- acute myeloid leukemia
- case report
- high throughput
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- soft tissue
- candida albicans
- optical coherence tomography
- radiation therapy
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- diffuse large b cell lymphoma
- squamous cell carcinoma
- insulin resistance
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