Ovarian histoplasmosis in systemic lupus erythematosus.

Pathology

Department of Pathology, University of Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.

Published: May 2000

Histoplasma capsulatum is a pathogenic fungus endemic to North, Central, and South America. Histoplasmosis is primarily acquired by inhalation and in immunocompetent hosts infection is generally limited to the lungs. Histoplasmosis may disseminate systemically in hosts with defective cell-mediated immunity or massive inoculation. Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is an autoimmune disorder associated with multiple primary and drug-related immunological defects that predispose patients to infections. Disseminated histoplasmosis has only rarely been described in association with SLE. We describe a 32-year-old woman with SLE who had a 2-year history of irregular menses and a confirmed anovulatory state, secondary to ovarian histoplasmosis. The ovarian histoplasmosis was discovered incidentally at surgery for a persistent colo-cecal fistula, which had developed 6 months earlier and was originally associated with an Actinomyces and Fusobacterium pelvic abscess. The patient had no evidence of active pulmonary histoplasmosis and her disseminated histoplasmosis likely resulted from re-activation of latent disease. This is the first description of disseminated histoplasmosis presenting as ovarian dysfunction in a patient with SLE.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/003130200104411DOI Listing

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