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Research Article

Cryptococcal osteomyelitis of the skull

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Pages 667-671 | Received 21 Oct 2010, Accepted 24 Jan 2011, Published online: 02 Feb 2011
 

Abstract

An otherwise healthy 65-year-old male from a rural area presented with a 1-month old non-tender scalp mass. He had a history of being stuck with a stone in the parietal region a year earlier but hadn't developed any complications. Needle aspiration of the mass revealed numerous yeast cells, which were confirmed to be Cryptoccus neoformans. This case describes a rare presentation of C. neoformans infection in a human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-negative patient. Moreover, while osteomyelitis due to Cryptococcus is generally preceded by fungemia, in the present case it was caused by direct inoculation of the etiologic agent. We review 11 similar cases published since 1983 in which most of the patients developed an insidious mass in their scalps with osteolytic lesions as seen on X-ray and all were HIV-negative. Nine of the eleven patients in these cases had good recovery after surgical debridement and treatment with amphotericin B, flucytocise and/or fluconazole. The remaining two patients died during hospitalization. Cryptococcal osteomyelitis should be part of a differential diagnosis when confronted with an insidious growing mass or abscess of unclear origin in the scalp.

Acknowledgments

We thank Ernesto Viteri and John Richard Graybill for critical reading of the manuscript and Lynette E. Benjamin for confirmation of the identity of the isolate. Many thanks also to the Pathology Department of the Hospital General San Juan de Dios for the bone histology image.

Declaration of interest: The authors report no conflicts of interest. The authors alone are responsible for the content and writing of the paper.

This paper was first published online on Early Online on 8 February 2011.

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