Photo Rounds

“Fishy” papule

A 60-year-old man and avid fisherman presented to Dermatology for a skin exam. He was noted to have a 6-mm pink papule on his hand that had developed 8 weeks earlier, after he’d gone fishing for striped sea bass. He had mild pain and scant purulent drainage but was otherwise healthy.

What’s your diagnosis?


 

References

“Fishy” papule

A biopsy was performed to exclude squamous cell carcinoma and an additional biopsy was sent for tissue culture for aerobic and acid-fast bacteria. The culture revealed a surprising diagnosis: cutaneous mycobacterium marinum.

Mycobacterium marinum is one of many nontuberculosis mycobacteria that may rarely cause infections in immunocompetent patients. M marinum is found worldwide in saltwater and freshwater. Infections may occur in individuals working in fisheries or fish markets, natural marine environments, or with aquariums. The infection may gain access through small, even unnoticed breaks in the skin. Papules, pustules, or abscesses caused by M marinum develop a few weeks after exposure and share many features with other common skin infections, including Staphylococcus aureus. Lymphatic involvement and sporotrichoid spread may occur. Immunocompromised patients can experience deeper involvement into tendons. Patients with significant soft tissue pain should undergo computed tomography, or preferably magnetic resonance imaging, to determine the extent of disease.

For immunocompetent patients and those with limited disease, as in this case, spontaneous resolution can occur after a year or more. However, because of the potential risk of more severe disease, treatment is recommended. M marinum is resistant to multiple antibiotics and there are no standardized treatment guidelines. Minocycline 100 mg bid for 3 weeks to 3 months is 1 accepted regimen for limited disease; treatment should be continued for 3 to 4 weeks following clinical resolution.1 Patients with more widespread disease benefit from evaluation by Infectious Diseases. Patients exposed to atypical mycobacteria may have false positive QuantiFERON-TB Gold tests that are commonly performed prior to biologic therapies.2

This patient achieved complete resolution of his signs and symptoms after receiving minocycline 100 mg bid for 6 weeks. He continues to fish recreationally.

Text courtesy of Jonathan Karnes, MD, medical director, MDFMR Dermatology Services, Augusta, ME. Photos courtesy of Jonathan Karnes, MD (copyright retained).

Recommended Reading

One-third of psoriatic arthritis patients could have metabolic syndrome, data analysis finds
MDedge Family Medicine
Managing overuse of food IgE panels: Multiple approaches needed
MDedge Family Medicine
Extensive scarring alopecia and widespread rash
MDedge Family Medicine
Methotrexate plus leflunomide proves effective for PsA
MDedge Family Medicine
Complex link between gut microbiome and immunotherapy response in advanced melanoma
MDedge Family Medicine
Discoid lupus
MDedge Family Medicine
Labial growth
MDedge Family Medicine
Drug survival study looks at what lasts longest in RA, axSpA, PsA, and psoriasis
MDedge Family Medicine
An 11-year-old female presented with skin discoloration on her back
MDedge Family Medicine
Study links air pollution to psoriasis flares
MDedge Family Medicine