id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt cord-017040-4zajnrsf Rihana, Nancy Skin Infections 2019-08-11 .txt text/plain 6486 408 36 Pseudomonas aeruginosa, usually a nosocomial pathogen has emerged as a common cause of infection in immunocompromised patients; most often in neutropenic leukemics during chemotherapy. The dermatologic manifestations of Pseudomonas sepsis include ecthyma gangrenosum, hemorrhagic bullae, necrotizing/gangrenous or bullous cellulitis, painful vesicular lesions, and small papules on the trunk resembling rose spots of typhoid fever, grouped petechiae, erysipelas-like lesions with hyperesthesia, erythematous or violaceous subcutaneous painful nodules, and necrotizing or malignant external otitis [3] . In the immunocompromised, the typical history of previous trauma or surgery is absent, thus cutaneous Mycobacteria infection are most probably the result of hematogenic dissemination, resulting in multiple skin lesions. Although aspergillus is one of the most common etiologies of invasive fungal infections in patients with underlying malignancies, dermatologic manifestations occurs in less than 5% of cases [41, 42] . Cutaneous lesions typically present in cases of disseminated disease and often mimic other dermatologic infections due its' ability to manifest with many skin findings including papules, plaques, nodules, ulcers or pustules. ./cache/cord-017040-4zajnrsf.txt ./txt/cord-017040-4zajnrsf.txt