ARTICLE
Case report
A 9-year-old boy was admitted to the dermatology department outpatient
clinic because of a giant tumoral mass on the nose. A careful history
revealed that this lesion had appeared 3 weeks before as a small papule
that developed later to form a bleeding and crusted tumoral mass. It was
unresponsive to antibiotics. The boy lived in a village and his family
kept lambs, which he sometimes fed.
Examination revealed a giant, bleeding mass on the nose. The tumor was
firm and painful and bled easily but was not accompanied by fever or other
symptoms. It measured 5 cm by 4 cm and was attached to the right ala nasi
by a base 2 cm in diameter (Fig.
1). It completely covered the nose and right nostril but there was
no evidence of involvement of the inner mucosa. Serosanguinous material
exudate was crusted on the lesion. Physical examination was unremarkable.
Gram stains of swabs from the lesion showed no bacteria. An excisional
biopsy specimen was taken from the edge of the pedunculated mass. Histology
showed acanthosis, spongiosis and pseudoepitheliomatous hyperplasia (Fig.
2). Some epidermis cells contained eosinophilic inclusion bodies (Fig.
3). The underlying dermis showed marked vascular hyperplasia and dilatation.
In the areas of endothelial cells, hyperchromatic cell nuclei undergoing
mitosis were observed. Electron microscopic examination of a paraffin-embedded
biopsy specimen demonstrated cylindrical viral particles between the keratinocytes
with a dense core and two less dense outer layers consistent with the
parapox virus (Fig. 4).
Our first clinical impression on clinical diagnosis was giant pyogenic
granuloma or malignancy. The lesion's unusual location and size led to
initial uncertainty in the diagnosis. The patient's history of feeding
lambs, the viral particles in the biopsy specimen and the clinical features
suggested orf. Diagnosis was confirmed by electron microscopy.
The patient was seen at weekly intervals. The lesion was managed conservatively
and no specific therapy was undertaken other than local wound care. Within
one week, the oozing and bleeding had decreased. One week later, the patient
presented a smaller, dried and crusted lesion. The crust was removed easily
and the free edge of the lesion appeared as pinkish skin. Over the next
2 weeks, the mass evolved to a papillomatous stage and subsequently decreased
in size (Fig. 5). Two
months later, the skin had slight macular erythema, and it healed with
minimal scarring (Fig. 6).
The entire cycle lasted about 3 months.
Discussion
Orf (also called: ecthyma contagiosum, scabby mouth, sore mouth, contagious
pustular dermatitis, contagious pustular stomatitis, and contagious bovine
ecthyma) is an infectious mucocutaneous disease of sheep and goats caused
by a virus of the subgroup parapox of the poxvirus that is transmissible
to man. In lambs, it is characterized by a vesiculopapular eruption affecting
chiefly the mouth, nose, udder and feet. Transmission to man usually occurs
by direct contact with an infected animal or, less often, indirectly through
objects [1-3].
The prevalence of human orf infection is underestimated. This may be
because orf is a common, self-limiting disease that is recognized by the
population at risk; therefore, medical care is not sought and many infections
are not reported. It is considered to be an occupational disease in farmers,
shepherds, veterinarians and abattoir workers [3-5]. However, religious
habits may also be a source of contamination. Every year, an outbreak
of orf is observed in Turkey, occurring 2 or 3 weeks after the Feast of
Sacrifice. During this religious feast, each Muslim family sacrifies a
sheep or cow, and viral contamination from an infected lamb may occur
easily. Gunes described an orf epidemic in Izmir, Turkey, after a Feast
of Sacrifice [6, 7].
In man, the disease is manifested as a solitary
papular skin lesion on exposed body areas. Usually there is a single lesion
located on a finger or other part of the hand, with other sites such as
the face only occasionally being involved [8, 9], although multiple lesions
on various body parts have also been reported [2, 3, 10, 11]. An orf lesion
on the tip of the nose has been reported but it was not giant [12].
The orf lesion usually appears after an incubation period of less than
four weeks. Spontaneous resolution often occurs within six weeks. The
disease progresses through six distinct clinical and histopathologic stages:
maculopapular, target, acute, regenerative, papillomatous, and regressive.
The maculopapular stage consists of an erythematous macule or papule.
In the target stage, the lesion has a red center, a central white ring,
and an outer red halo. The acute stage consists of an erythematous weeping
nodule. In the regenerative stage the lesion is dry with small black dots
on the outside surface. The papillomatous stage is characterized by papillomas
appearing on the surface. A dry crust characterizes the regressive stage.
Residual scarring is unusual [1, 3, 13].
Only rarely, systemic symptoms or complications occur. The most commonly
reported complications of orf are fever, superinfection, erysipelas, lymphadenitis,
ocular damage, and erythema multiforme [2, 3, 9, 13].
Orf is a self-limiting disease in immunocompetent
patients and no specific treatment is required. Immunocompromised patients,
however, can develop very large and atypical orf lesions which do not
always regress spontaneously and may recur [14-16]. Granulomatous giant
lesions in normal individuals similar to that of our patient have been
reported [17] and healed. Our patient did not present the typical features
of orf and was suspected of having pyogenic granuloma and malignancy.
There was no clinical evidence of general ill-health nor any reason to
suppose that he was immunologically compromised.
Antibiotics are widely used against possible bacterial infection but
they do not affect the course of the disease [3]. Cryotherapy [18], surgical
excision, interferons [15], and 40% topical idoxuridine [15, 19] have
been reported in the treatment of orf.
We are of the opinion that human infection of orf will continue to occur
and all physicians should remain aware that infection may occur anywhere
and consider it in the differential diagnosis of cases with relevant animal
exposure. Although orf is generally a trivial and self-limiting process,
it is important that it be diagnosed correctly because inappropriate treatment
may cause long-term disability or a scar [11, 12].
Article accepted on 17/9/01
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