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Sporotrichosis: a review of a neglected disease in the last 50 years in Brazil

Alvarez, C. M. and Oliveira, M. M. E. and Pires, R. H.

Microorganisms (2022) 10:

DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms10112152

Abstract

Sporotrichosis is caused by fungi belonging to the genus Sporothrix, which saprophytically are found in plants and organic matter. However, cats are highly susceptible to contamination with fungal spores and, when they become sick, they can transmit it to other animals and to man. The objective of this study is to carry out a systematic review on the emergency, diagnosis, clinical symptoms, therapeutics, and control of zoonotic sporotrichosis. Published data covering the last 50 years using a combination of keywords were selected to answer the question: Why has the zoonotic sporotrichosis been a neglected disease up to now? A total of 135 studies were included in this review. The studies emphasize that in recent decades, Brazil has experienced an unprecedented zoonotic outbreak of sporotrichosis. Advances on the genus Sporothrix allowed one to associate thermotolerance, capacity for melanin synthesis, potential for adhesion to tissue macromolecules, ergosterol peroxide production, and expression of virulence proteins as tools for infection and invasion in S. brasiliensis, the main species involved, although cases with S. schenckii or S. lurei were also reported. Correct diagnosis, early treatment, basic educational measures that emphasize responsible ownership of animals and reproductive control programs for felines can contribute to the control of zoonosis.

Citation

Alvarez, C. M., Oliveira, M. M. E., & Pires, R. H. (2022). Sporotrichosis: a review of a neglected disease in the last 50 years in Brazil. Microorganisms, 10(11). https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms10112152 Brazil, systematic reviews, human diseases, zoonoses, infections, risk factors, clinical aspects, synthesis, outbreaks, mycoses, organic matter, risk, drug therapy, gene expression, symptoms, sporotrichosis, protein, medical treatment, adhesion, emergencies, ergosterol, melanins, peroxides, spores

Keywords