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Mycology 2 Systemic & Oppurtunistic Fungi DPT-6 Dr Sadia Ikram Systemic Mycoses Transmission • Result from inhalation of spores of dimorphic fungi having mold forms in soil. • In lungs, spores differentiate into yeasts. • Most lung infections asymptomatic. • Disseminated disease in some people destructive lesions & death. • not communicable to others. Systemic Mycosis • Coccidioides immitis causes coccidioidomycosis. • Histoplasma capsulatum causes histoplasmosis. • Blastomyces dermatitidis causes blastomycosis or North American blastomycosis. • Paracoccidioides brasiliensis causes paracoccidioidomycosis or South American blastomycosis. Pathogenesis & Clinical Findings • These organisms spread within a person by direct extension or via bloodstream. • Granulomatous lesions occur in any organ, primarily in bones & central nervous system (meningitis). Laboratory Diagnosis • Microscopy. • Cultures on Sabouraud's agar. • Serologic tests: IgM and IgG appear within 2 to 4 weeks of infection. Treatment • Amphotericin B (Fungizone) or itraconazole. • Ketoconazole effective in lung disease. • No means of prevention. Oppurtunistic Fungi • No disease in immunocompetent persons. • Cause diseases in immuno-compromised host. • Candida albicans. • Cryptococcus neoformans. Candida albicans • Causes thrush, vaginitis, esophagitis, diaper rash, and chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis. • Disseminated infections like right-sided endocarditis (in intravenous drug users). • Blood stream infections (candidemia), and endophthalmitis. • Infections related to indwelling intravenous and urinary catheters. • Can. albicans oval yeast with a single bud. • Part of normal flora of mucous membranes of upper respiratory, gastrointestinal, and female genital tracts. • In tissues it appear as yeasts or pseudohyphae. Transmission • The presence of Can. albicans on the skin predisposes to infections involving instruments that penetrate the skin, such as needles and indwelling catheters. • Infections in immunocompromised people. Pathogenesis & Clinical Findings • Overgrowth of Can. albicans in mouth produces white patches (thrush or pseudomembrane. • Vaginitis with itching and discharge favored by high pH, diabetes, or use of antibiotics. • Skin invasion in warm, moist areas, which become red and weeping. • Fingers and nails involved onrepeated immersion in water. • Thickening or loss of the nail can occur. • Diaper rash in infants: when wet diapers not changed promptly. • In immunosuppressed individuals, Intravenous drug abuse, indwelling intravenous catheters: Candida disseminate to many organs or cause chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis, rightsided endocarditis and endophthalmitis. Laboratory Diagnosis • Microscopy: In exudates or tissues, budding yeasts and pseudohyphae appear gram-positive. • Can be visualized by calcofluor-white staining. • In culture: yeast colonies are formed resembling large Staphylococcal colonies. • Germ tubes form in serum at 37°C, serves to distinguish Can. albicans from other Candida species. • Serologic testing. Treatment • For oropharyngeal or esophageal thrush: Fluconazole, Caspofungin or micafungin. • Skin infections: topical antifungal drugs, e.g., Clotrimazole or nystatin. • Mucocutaneous candidiasis: Ketoconazole. • Disseminated candidiasis: Amphotericin B or fluconazole. • Candidal infections, e.g., thrush, prevented by oral clotrimazole, nystatin or Micafungin. • No vaccine. Cryptococcus • Cryptococcus neoformans causes cryptococcosis (cryptococcal meningitis). • Cryptococcosis most common life-threatening fungal disease in AIDS patients. Properties & Transmission • Oval, budding yeast surrounded by a wide polysaccharide capsule. • Not dimorphic. • Occurs widely in nature and grows abundantly in soil containing bird (especially pigeon) droppings. • Birds not infected. • Human infection results from inhalation of organism. • No human-to-human transmission. Pathogenesis • Lung infection often asymptomatic. • May produce pneumonia. • Disseminates to central nervous system (meningitis) and other organs. • Subcutaneous nodules. Laboratory Diagnosis • Microscopically: In spinal fluid mixed with India ink, the yeast cell seen surrounded by a wide, unstained capsule. • Methenamine silver, periodic acid–Schiff, and mucicarmine staining technique. • Cultured from spinal fluid and other specimens: colonies highly mucoid. • Serologic tests: capsular antigen in high titer in spinal fluid, detected by latex particle agglutination test. Treatment • Amphotericin B and flucytosine used in meningitis and disseminated disease. • Fluconazole used in AIDS patients for longterm suppression of cryptococcal meningitis. • No prevention.