ORAL HISTOPLASMOSIS IN A PATIENT INFECTED WITH HIV - A CASE-REPORT

Citation
S. Swindells et al., ORAL HISTOPLASMOSIS IN A PATIENT INFECTED WITH HIV - A CASE-REPORT, Oral surgery, oral medicine, oral pathology, 77(2), 1994, pp. 126-130
Citations number
11
Categorie Soggetti
Pathology,Surgery,"Dentistry,Oral Surgery & Medicine
ISSN journal
00304220
Volume
77
Issue
2
Year of publication
1994
Pages
126 - 130
Database
ISI
SICI code
0030-4220(1994)77:2<126:OHIAPI>2.0.ZU;2-7
Abstract
Histoplasmosis is a frequent complication of HIV infection and is usua lly the result of reactivation. In the immunocompromised host, histopl asmosis may cause a chronic pulmonary infection or disseminated diseas e. In the setting of disseminated disease, oral lesions are present in 30% to 50% of patients and may occur in almost every part of the oral mucosa. The most common sites are the tongue, palate, and buccal muco sa. In some cases, oral lesions appear to be the primary or only manif estation of disease. We have been able to find only five case reports in the literature of histoplasmosis in HIV infection with oral lesions . In two of the cases, histoplasmosis was apparently localized to the oral cavity, whereas two cases also had evidence of disseminated disea se, the fifth was undetermined. We report one such case of apparently localized oral histoplasmosis in a patient with HIV infection.