What is chromoblastomycosis?
also referred to as Fonseca's disease, faeosporotrichosis and Pedros's disease, skin disease known as chromblastomycosis is a chronic fungal infection capable of affecting both visible areas of the body and subcutaneous tissue. The disease originally develops near the wound site or near another type of trauma on the lower limbs. The condition is recorded for its ability to cause nodes to grow nodes reminiscent of large warts, papillomas and ulcerated lesions that can eventually spread and intensify. Chromoblastomycosis is almost never deadly, but often turns out to be a stubborn face in the face of treatment and may require significant surgical and drug intervention. The manifestations of the disease may first take the form of smaller, reddish lesions that eventually progress to become a much more striking nature. For many years, often the initial trauma of the skin and the emergence of more serious infections, and in general, it is that the trigger injury will be forgotten due to its relative insignificance at the time of occurrence.Once the condition manifests itself, it is possible for significant complications to evolve, resulting in more aggressive medical care.
Advanced cases of chromoblastomycosis represent the potential for relatively serious complications. In most cases, this type of infection does not proceed outside the initial trauma of the skin. More annoyed presentations of this disease may occur when fungal infection spreads to the blood and lymphatic systems of the patient, resulting in large swelling of the limbs and possible secondary infections. Elephantitis and necrosis are other complications observed in more advanced cases of chromoblastomycosis abude to require other treatments. In rare cases, lesions caused by this type of infection are grinding into spinocellular carcinoma, malignant forms of skin cancer.
Typical treatment of drugs for chromoblastomycosis involves administration of antifungal azols, often in conjunction with flucytosin.In cases where secondary bacterial infection has occurred, antibiotics will be prescribed. Surgical interventions for this are targeted excision of skin lesions and cryosurgia techniques that use cold liquid nitrogen to destroy affected tissues. In appropriate treatment, patients with chromoblastomycosis have a positive prognosis, especially in cases characterized by smaller, more limited infections. Even in advanced cases where a noticeable physical scarring occurred, the condition is almost always managed and cases of death or inability resulting from infection are extremely rare.