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Coccidioidomycosis

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4 Diagnosis Dissemination Î Hematogenous spread beyond the lungs normally occurs within weeks to several months following infection. • Exceptions to this estimate are immunosuppressed patients with more remote prior exposure or patients who have previously been treated with an antifungal drug for primary pulmonary infection in whom relapses occurred up to 4 years after treatment had been stopped. ÎThe signs and symptoms of disseminated coccidioidal lesions vary widely depending upon their location. Importantly, pulmonary symptoms or radiographic abnormalities may be minimal or completely absent. Î Although patients with deficiencies in cellular immunity are especially susceptible to severe coccidioidomycosis including dissemination, most patients with coccidioidal lesions outside of the lungs have no identified immune deficiencies. Serological Testing Î Enzyme immunoassays (EIAs) for anticoccidioidal immunoglobulin M (IgM) and immunoglobulin G (IgG) are commercially available. Î When done to evaluate a clinical illness, any positive test result for anticoccidioidal antibodies is usually associated with a recent or active coccidioidal infection, in contrast with serologic tests for many other types of infection where diagnostic IgG antibodies often are detectable for life. Î An important limitation of all coccidioidal serologic tests is that they may be negative and even persistently negative despite an early coccidioidal infection being present. Î EIA is often used for initial screening because of its increased sensitivity. However, if not confirmed by the more specific but less sensitive immunodiffusion test, the diagnosis is less certain. Repeat testing is often useful to resolve this uncertainty. Î Patients who have already developed extrapulmonary coccidioidal lesions nearly always exhibit anticoccidioidal antibodies in their serum, regardless of whether tested by EIA, immunodiffusion or complement fixation titration. Severely immunosuppressed patients may be exceptions to this rule.

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