RHINOSPORIDIOSIS
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Rhinosporidiosis is a chronic zoonotic infection caused by eukaryotic organism Rhinosporidium seeberi
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It is endemic in Brazil, Sri Lanka and India. Sporadic cases are seen in USA
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Mode of transmission –
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From the cattle, horses and mules
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Endospores are transmitted by water or dust
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They penetrate the nasal cavity mucosa and matures into sporangium within the submucosal tissue
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After maturation sporangia bursts and releases endospores into surrounding tissue
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Clinical features
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Site – sinonasal tract (common). Other sites are Larynx, tracheobronchial tree, esophagus, conjunctiva, ears and genital tract
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Age – usually in the 3rd and 4th decades of life but can occur at any age group
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Sex – slight male predominance
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Symptoms – Patients present with
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Nasal obstruction
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Rhinorrhea
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Epistaxis
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Morphology
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Gross – Presents as polypoidal mass which may be single or multiple, sessile or pedunculated typically described as strawberry like appearance
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Microscopy
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Polypoidal mucosal tissue lined by ciliated pseudostratified columnar epithelium or metaplastic stratified squamous epithelium
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Characteristic sporangia of size 150 – 350μm are present in mucosa and submucosa
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Mature spoprangia has thick chitinous wall and contains hundreds to thousands of endospores (2 – 9μm)
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Immature endospores are presen at the periphery of the sporangia and the central part of sporangia has mature endospores
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Edematous interstitial stroma contains chronic inflammatory cells containing lymphocytes, plasma cells and eosinophils
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Neutrophilic infiltration and granuloma formation are seen when there is rupture of the sporangia
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Treatment and prognosis
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Surgical excision is the treatment of choice. Antibiotics are not effective
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Prognosis is excellent
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