“…After a pioneer study that was conducted by Beurmann and Gougerot involving 250 cases of cutaneous sporotrichosis in France (Beurmann and Gougerot, 1912), the number of cases has decreased drastically in Europe, and currently, only sporadic cases have been recently reported in some countries such as Spain, Italy and Portugal (Carlos and Batista-Duharte, 2015). Sporothrix schenckii sensu lato, the etiologic agent of sporotrichosis, is a complex of at least four pathogenic species that include Sporothrix brasiliensis, S. schenckii sensu stricto, Sporothrix globosa, and Sporothrix luriei (de Beer et al, 2016). However, the two most important pathogenic species are both S. schenckii sensu stricto, which is responsible for human sporotrichosis worldwide and S. brasiliensis, which is the more virulent specie, involved in an expanding zoonosis transmitted by cats in Brazil (Arrillaga-Moncrieff et al, 2009;Castro et al, 2013;Della Terra et al, 2017).…”