Dermatopathology (Oct 2021)

Skin Mycetoma in an 11-Year-Old African Boy: Case Presentation with Emphasis on Histopathological Features and Differential Diagnosis

  • Gerardo Cazzato,
  • Anna Colagrande,
  • Antonietta Cimmino,
  • Lucia Lospalluti,
  • Aurora Demarco,
  • Caterina Foti,
  • Paolo Romita,
  • Francesca Arezzo,
  • Vera Loizzi,
  • Paola Parente,
  • Leonardo Resta,
  • Giuseppe Ingravallo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/dermatopathology8040053
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 4
pp. 509 – 514

Abstract

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Mycetoma is an uncommon, chronic infective disease of the skin and subcutaneous tissues, characterized by the triad of tumefaction, draining sinuses, and the presence in the exudate of colonial grains. In cases of long-term disease, the presence of colonial grains together with the host’s derivative material can lead to the formation of real sinuses. Histological analysis is of fundamental importance to allow an accurate etiological diagnosis and to understand if the basic pathogen is an actinomycete (bacterium) or a real fungus (eumycetic mycetomas) and is also fundamental for therapy, which is quite different. Here, we present a case of Mycetoma in an 11-year-old patient who emigrated from Djibouti, Somalia, and showed the essential histopathological features of this rare and forgotten nosographic entity in the industrialized world and briefly discuss the major and most important differential diagnoses.

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