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Recurrence of cutaneous coccidioidomycosis 6 years after valley fever: A case presentation and literature review.

Coccidioidomycosis is usually acquired by inhalation of spores of Coccidioides immitis and C. posadasii. The disease ranges from a self-limited acute pneumonia (Valley Fever) to a disseminated disease. We present a 44-year-old healthy male who had patchy hair loss of several months duration resembling discoid lupus. He developed a firm non-scaly red plaque on the right forehead. Initial biopsy showed spongiotic dermatitis, and he was treated with systemic steroids. He then developed forehead and periorbital cellulitis and was treated with systemic antibiotics. A second biopsy showed fungal hyphae, and he was treated with itraconazole 200mg bid for 4months beyond clinical resolution. A year later, he presented with intermittent swelling of the right forehead lesion and worsening of the scalp lesions. A forehead biopsy showed interface dermatitis and negative PAS stain for fungi. Scalp biopsy was highly suggestive of discoid lupus and he was started on plaquenil. Many months later, a third biopsy showed fungal infection, and the culture grew C. immitis. He was treated with itraconazole. Retrospectively, the patient gave a history of Valley fever 6 years back when he was in Arizona, USA.

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