Emergomycosis
Alerts and Notices
Important News & Links
Synopsis
Sporadic cases of the disease have been documented worldwide, including North America (Canada: Alberta, Saskatchewan; United States: Arizona, Utah, Colorado, New Mexico), Europe (Italy, Spain, France, the Netherlands, Germany), and Asia (China, India). Within Africa, cases have been described in South Africa and Uganda, with the greatest burden in South Africa, where most infections are attributed to E africanus and primarily present with skin involvement in patients with advanced HIV disease.
The infection occurs mainly in immunocompromised hosts, most frequently in HIV-infected individuals, but also in transplant recipients and in patients with diabetes, hematologic malignancies, or those on chronic immunosuppressive therapy. Transmission is presumed to occur via inhalation of soilborne conidia, which converts to a yeast phase in vivo and may disseminate hematogenously in susceptible individuals.
Clinical presentation is typically disseminated at diagnosis. Cutaneous lesions are the most common manifestation, seen in up to 96% of patients in one study, while pulmonary involvement is present in approximately 88%. Lesions are often widespread and polymorphic. Less commonly, disease may involve the bone marrow, lymph nodes, liver, spleen, and cervix.
Codes
B48.8 – Other specified mycoses
SNOMEDCT:
721797009 – Disseminated infection caused by Chrysosporium
Look For
Subscription Required
Diagnostic Pearls
Subscription Required
Differential Diagnosis & Pitfalls
Subscription Required
Best Tests
Subscription Required
Management Pearls
Subscription Required
Therapy
Subscription Required
Drug Reaction Data
Subscription Required
References
Subscription Required
Last Updated:01/11/2026
