Abstract

AbstractThe diagnosis of disseminated coccidioidomycosis was made in two pregnant women by the biopsy of facial granulomas. The unusual presentation and the problems associated with the management of this disease in pregnancy stimulated a literature review and a report of these two cases.The history of the discovery and elucidation of this disease is reviewed. Documentation of interhuman transmission of coccidioidomycosis by fomites is presented. Previous reports of disseminated coccidioidomycosis being found in the endolarynx, epiglottis and region of the head and neck are cited. The high incidence of fetal wastage, the high maternal mortality associated with dissemination and the role of Amphotericin B in the therapy of the disseminated disease are discussed.

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