Overview of Cutaneous Mycobacterial Infections

皮肤分枝杆菌感染概述

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Abstract

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Mycobacterial infections may affect any human organ and produce disseminated disease in immunocompromised individuals. Their most common clinical presentations include pulmonary, cutaneous (skin and soft tissues), and disseminated forms. The skin and soft tissues are frequent targets of affection by mycobacterial pathogens manifesting as localized or diffuse disease. RECENT FINDINGS: Overall, infections due to Mycobacterium leprae, Mycobacterium ulcerans, and Mycobacterium tuberculosis are the most frequently recognized mycobacterial pathogens involving the skin and soft tissues. Additionally, all mycobacterial species of the nontuberculous group may also produce cutaneous disease. Of these, the most commonly identified organisms causing localized infections of the skin and subcutaneous tissues are the rapidly growing species (Mycobacterium fortuitum, Mycobacterium chelonae, and Mycobacterium abscessus complex), Mycobacterium marinum, and M. ulcerans. Since the skin and soft tissues are important protective barriers for environmental pathogens, their disruption often represents the portal of entry of nontuberculous environmental mycobacteria (soil, natural water systems, engineered water networks, etc.). Additionally, some mycobacterial diseases affecting cutaneous structures occur after exposure to infected animals or their products (i.e., Mycobacterium bovis). Mycobacterial infections of the skin and soft tissues may manifest with a broad range of clinical phenotypes such as cellulitis, single or multiple abscesses, subacute or chronic nodular lesions, macules, superficial lymphadenitis, plaques, nonhealing ulcers, necrotic plaques, verrucous lesions, and many other dermatologic manifestations. SUMMARY: Geography and environmental exposure play an important role in the epidemiology of cutaneous mycobacterial infections. Mycobacterial infection of the skin and subcutaneous tissue is an important cause of human suffering in terms of morbidity, deformity, dysfunction, and stigma. The diagnosis of cutaneous mycobacterial infections is challenging requiring a low threshold of clinical suspicion for obtaining skin biopsies of cutaneous lesions for acid-fast staining and cultures, and molecular probe assays to detect the presence of mycobacterial pathogens. The choice of antibacterial therapy combinations and length of therapy for cutaneous mycobacterial infections is species-specific.

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