Birefringent Trails: A Case Report Unveiling Heroin-Adulterant Granulomas Masquerading Sporotrichoid Nodular Lymphangitis

AuthorSiddhi B Chikhalkaren
AuthorKetki Shekhar Bhoiteen
AuthorVijay Deepak Joshien
AuthorNitesh Sidaren
AuthorKanchan Kotharien
OrcidKetki Shekhar Bhoite [0000-0002-4542-0143]en
OrcidVijay Deepak Joshi [0000-0002-0103-6641]en
Issued Date2025-09-30en
AbstractIntroduction: Intravenous (IV) opioid abuse manifests across a broad dermatologic spectrum, with the skin often offering the earliest clinical clues of substance use. While infectious etiologies such as sporotrichosis and atypical mycobacterial infections remain top considerations in patients presenting with nodulo-ulcerative lesions arranged in a sporotrichoid pattern, the potential for non-infectious inflammatory mimics — particularly those induced by insoluble adulterants — warrants recognition. Adulterants such as talc and silica, routinely added to street heroin to enhance volume or texture, may incite robust foreign body granulomatous reactions. These can deceptively mirror classical lymphocutaneous infections, blurring diagnostic lines and complicating management. Case Presentation: A 21-year-old male with a known history of heroin dependence presented with multiple painful nodules and ulcers distributed linearly over both upper limbs, mimicking sporotrichoid lymphangitis. Initial clinical suspicion leaned towards deep fungal or atypical mycobacterial infections. Yet, an exhaustive infectious workup, including tissue cultures and special histochemical stains, yielded no causative pathogen. Histopathological analysis revealed dense pyogranulomatous inflammation with neutrophils, histiocytes, and multinucleated giant cells harboring refractile, non-staining structures. The diagnostic turning point came with polarized light microscopy, which unveiled numerous birefringent, needle-like, and quadrangular/tubular particles consistent with silica and talc particles, respectively. This confirmed a diagnosis of foreign body granulomatous dermatitis induced by adulterants introduced via IV injection. The patient demonstrated partial clinical improvement with a combination of doxycycline, colchicine, and intralesional corticosteroids. Conclusions: This case underscores the need for a high index of suspicion for adulterant-induced granulomas in patients with sporotrichoid dermatoses and a history of IV drug use. Polarized light microscopy is instrumental in unraveling the etiology, with the telltale birefringence of talc and silica serving as diagnostic beacons. Timely recognition of this entity not only prevents unwarranted antimicrobial therapy but also directs clinicians toward appropriate anti-inflammatory treatment and reinforces the importance of integrated addiction care.en
DOIhttps://doi.org/10.5812/jssc-163965en
KeywordHeroinen
KeywordTalcen
KeywordInflammatory Cutaneous Lesionsen
KeywordHistopathologyen
PublisherBrieflandsen
TitleBirefringent Trails: A Case Report Unveiling Heroin-Adulterant Granulomas Masquerading Sporotrichoid Nodular Lymphangitisen
TypeCase Reporten

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