Bacillary angiomatosis

Gerzaín Rodríguez, Beatríz E. Torres, Adriana Motta, .

Keywords: Bacillary angiomatosis, cat scratch disease, Bartonella henselae, Bartonella's electron microscopy, thick sections of Bartonella

Abstract

Bacillary angiomatosis is a bacterial disease which affects mainly immunosuppressed patients. It may compromise any tissue, especially the skin, presenting papules, nodules or angiomatous tumors. We studied three young men with AIDS, all of them with 1-2 papules, nodules or subcutaneous tumors suggesting telangiectatic granuloma, sarcoma and lipoma. Microscopically, they were misdiagnosed as telangiectatic granuloma, Kaposi?s sarcoma and ?angioma with secondary inflammation?. After reviewing the histopathology, we saw them to be composed by vessels with prominent endothelium and stroma rich in leucocytoclastic polymorphonuclears. Fibrinoid deposits were observed in the neighborhood of vessels as well as minute eosinophilic granular interstitial masses corresponding to Bartonella aggregates, criteria which answer to the diagnosis of bacillary angiomatosis with HE staining. The Warthin-Starry stain was not useful; using resin embedded tissue from paraffin-embedded material, bacterial clusters, both in semithin sections stained with toluidine blue and in thin sections observed under the electron microscope, were clearly seen, confirming bacillary angiomatosis diagnosis. Patients were succesfully treated with surgery and either erythromycin or doxicycline. We reviewed the entity as well as its differential diagnoses with telangiectatic granuloma, Kaposis sarcoma, Carrión's disease, and cat-scratch disease. In conclusion, we showed the presence of bacillary angiomatosis in three patients, illustrated its typical histopathological appearance with HE staining and demonstrated the causal bacteria in thick sections and with the electron microscope. It is essential to recognize bacillary angiomatosis, as it can be cured with antibiotics.

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  • Gerzaín Rodríguez Laboratorio de Patología, Instituto Nacional de Salud; Departamento de Patología, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Bogotá, D.C.
  • Beatríz E. Torres Hospital Simón Bolívar; Facultad de Medicina, Universidad El Bosque, Bogotá, D.C.
  • Adriana Motta Hospital Simón Bolívar; Facultad de Medicina, Universidad El Bosque, Bogotá, D.C.
How to Cite
1.
Rodríguez G, Torres BE, Motta A. Bacillary angiomatosis. biomedica [Internet]. 2002 Jun. 1 [cited 2024 May 19];22(2):141-54. Available from: https://revistabiomedica.org/index.php/biomedica/article/view/1153
Published
2002-06-01
Section
Case presentation

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