Table 1.
Report | Host | Presentation | Suspected route | Treatment received | Outcome |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
McKinney et al. 2022[11] | 6 year old boy Previously healthy |
Painless cervical lymph nodes 2 months | Numerous cats on his farm | Itraconazole x4 weeks | Lymphadenopathy resolved in the second week |
Picollo et al. 2021[12] | 4 year old girl Previously healthy |
Subacute axillar lymphadenopathy | Forearm injury. Lived with cats and dogs | Itraconazole x3 months | Clinically resolved at 3 months, no remission at 1 year |
Tilak et al. 2012[13] | 13 years old girl Previously healthy |
Inguinal lymphadenopathy for 4 years (with a small non-healing ulcer at the foot) | Thorn prick 2 years before the onset | Itraconazole x6 weeks | Marked clinical response at fourth week, resolution in 6 weeks |
Whitefield et al. 1995[14] | 10 year old boy Previously healthy |
Tender right axillar lymphadenopathy | Direct inoculation from playground | Potassium iodide x 4 months | Clinically resolved at 3 months, no remission at 18 months |