4.3 Article

Histoplasmosis mimicking metastatic spinal tumour

Journal

JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL MEDICAL RESEARCH
Volume 45, Issue 4, Pages 1440-1446

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/0300060517708530

Keywords

Histoplasmosis; spine; infection; cancer

Funding

  1. Medical Science and Technology Project of Zhejiang Province of China [2016KYA096, 2017KY071]
  2. Natural Science Funds of Zhejiang Province [Y17H160033]

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Histoplasmosis is an infection caused by a fungus called Histoplasma. Diagnosis of histoplasmosis is based on the culture of biological samples and detection of fungus in tissues. Histoplasmosis can mimic malignant lesions. We report a 65-year-old, immunocompetent, male patient with back pain. We describe the main clinical and radiological characteristics in our patient who had vertebral histoplasmosis that mimicked cancer. A computed tomography scan showed lytic lesions of the right side of T4, T5, and T6 vertebral bodies. Magnetic resonance imaging displayed abnormal marrow signals in T4, T5, and T6 vertebral bodies (low signal on T1, high on T2 and short time inversion recovery (STIR)). Which was mimicking malignancy, such as haematological malignancy and metastatic bone cancer. Therefore, thoracic spinal surgery using the anterior approach was performed. An intraoperative frozen section examination and routine postoperative pathology showed thoracic histoplasmosis infection. Treatment of histoplasmosis was performed with oral itraconazole. The lesions did not progress and the patient symptomatically improved at a follow-up of 26 months.

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