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Mucous Membrane and Deep Organ Fungal Infections

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Title: Mucous Membrane and Deep Organ Fungal Infections


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Mucous Membrane and Deep Organ Fungal Infections
  • Dr. John R. Warren
  • Department of Pathology
  • Northwestern University
  • Feinberg School of Medicine
  • June 2007

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Fungal Diseases
  • Yeast and Pseudohyphae in Tissue (37oC) and
    Culture (30oC)
  • Yeast Without Hyphae or Pseudohyphae in Tissue
    (37oC) and Culture (30oC)
  • Yeast in Tissue (37oC) and Hyphae in Culture
    (30oC)1
  • Hyphae in Tissue (37oC) and Culture (30oC)
  • 1Dimorphic fungi

3
Yeast and Pseudohyphae in Tissue and Culture
  • Candida albicans1
  • Candida tropicalis
  • Candida glabrata2
  • Candida parapsilosis
  • Candida krusei
  • 1Predominant species in clinical specimens
  • 2C. glabrata (formerly Torulopsis glabrata) does
    not form hyphae or pseudohyphae

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Yeast Without Hyphae or Pseudohyphae in Tissue
and Culture
  • Cryptococcus neoformans

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Yeast in Tissue and Hyphae in Culture1
  • Histoplasma capsulatum
  • Blastomyces dermatitidis
  • Coccidioides immitis
  • 1Dimorphic fungi

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Hyphae in Tissue and Culture
  • Aspergillus species1
  • Zygomycetes genera2
  • 1A. fumigatus, A. flavus, A. niger, A. terreus
  • 2Rhizopus, Mucor, Absidia

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Candidiasis
  • Candida albicans most common species
  • Yeast and pseudohyphae present in tissue (37oC)
    and culture (30oC)
  • Oral candidiasis (thrush), esophageal
    candidiasis, invasive candidiasis (necrotizing
    esophagitis, colonic mucosal necrosis in
    neutropenic patients intravascular catheter),
    candidal endocarditis

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Candidiasis
  • Colonization of mucosal surfaces, impairment of
    host defenses (neutropenia, decreased T cells),
    dissemination from mucosal sites of colonization
    (especially the esophagus)

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Laboratory Diagnosis of Candidasis
  • Tissue visualization of yeast and pseudohyphal
    forms by methenamine silver and PAS stain
  • Germ-tube formation (filamentous extensions from
    yeast cells in a serum suspension of yeast)
    presumptive identification of Candida albicans
  • Pseudohyphae with sporulation on deficient agar
    medium (corn meal) presumptive identification of
    yeast as Candida1
  • Carbohydrate assimilation patterns (growth/no
    growth with single carbohydrate substrates)
  • 1Presence of large and brightly refractile
    chlamydospores diagnostic of Candida albicans

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Cryptococcosis
  • Cryptococcus neoformans pathogenic, other species
    saprophytic
  • Yeast forms in tissue (37oC) and culture (30oC)
  • CNS cryptococcosis Insidious with mild headache,
    memory lapses, personality change, no or mild
    fever, occasionally signs of meningeal irritation
    (nuchal ridigity)

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Cryptococcosis
  • Disseminated cryptococcosis-skin, bone, prostate
  • Natural habitat Soil, especially soil mixed with
    excretion of birds (pigeons)
  • Organisms inhaled with lung portal of entry
  • Primary infection usually clinically inapparent

15
Cryptococcosis
  • Cryptococcus neoformans neurotropic with
    dissemination to the brain causing
    meningoencephalitis
  • Cryptococcal disease occurs primarily in
    immunocompromised conditions including AIDS,
    lymphoreticular malignancies, and corticosteroid
    therapy

16
Laboratory Diagnosis of Cryptococcosis
  • Tissue visualization of variably sized (4- 10
    ?m) narrow-based budding yeast forms by
    methenamine silver and PAS stain
  • Tissue visualization of yeast capsule by
    mucicarmine stain
  • Microscopic visualization of encapsulated
    variably sized yeast forms in India ink
    preparation of cerebrospinal fluid

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Laboratory Diagnosis of Cryptococcosis
  • Urease production
  • Inability to reduce nitrate
  • Growth of variably sized yeast forms without
    hyphae or pseudohyphae on deficient agar medium
    (corn meal)
  • Production of melanin from caffeic acid
    (3,4-dihydrocinnamic acid) on niger seed agar
  • Carbohydrate assimilation patterns

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Histoplasma capsulatum
  • A dimorphic fungus Mold at cool environmental
    temperatures (25o-30oC) and yeast at internal
    body temperature (37oC)
  • Endemic to the drainage basins of the Ohio,
    Missouri, and Mississippi River valleys
  • Key virulence factor?Inhibition of phagolysosome
    acidification

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Histoplasmosis
  • Inhalation of spores released by environmental
    mold form initiates pulmonary infection
  • Inhaled spores transform into yeast cells within
    alveolar spaces with infection of alveolar
    macrophages
  • Primary infection asymptomatic or mild, and
    infection with H. capsulatum becomes latent

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Histoplasmosis
  • Decrement in CD4 T cell function (AIDS, age
    especially older men with chronic obstructive
    pulmonary disease and/or diabetes mellitus)
    induces reactivation of latent infection with
    chronic cavitary histoplasmosis of the lung
    causing hemoptysis, or disseminated
    histoplasmosis with fever, weight loss,
    hepatosplenomegaly, adrenal insufficiency, and/or
    meningitis

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Laboratory Diagnosis of Histoplasmosis
  • Presence of small (2-4 ?m) intracellular yeast
    cells surrounded by a clear halo in macrophages
    (Giemsa stain)
  • Growth of mold in culture at 30oC with presence
    of large tuberculate macroconidia
    (conidiaspores) and numerous microconidia
  • Conversion of mold to small yeast cells at 37oC

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Blastomycosis
  • Blastomyces dermatitidis a dimorphic fungus
    (yeast form in tissue at 37oC and mold form in
    culture at 30oC)
  • Disease produced primarily by extrapulmonary
    dissemination, especially to the skin but also to
    the genitourinary tract (prostate, epididymis),
    and bone

41
Blastomycosis
  • Natural habitat Soil containing decayed
    vegetation or decomposed wood along waterways or
    next to lakes
  • Regions adjacent to the Mississippi and Ohio
    River valleys endemic
  • Air-born spores released by environmental mold
    form inhaled into the lungs with clinically
    inapparent (generally) pulmonary infection
  • Blastomycosis usually not opportunistic infection
    and occurs in normal host

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Laboratory Diagnosis of Blastomycosis
  • Tissue visualization of uniformly large (10-15
    ?m) broad-based budding yeast forms with thick
    double-contured cell walls by methenamine silver
    and PAS stain
  • Growth of mold in culture at 30oC with oval or
    pyriform microconidia at the tips of
    conidiophores (lollipops)
  • Conversion to yeast forms at 37oC

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Coccidioidomycosis
  • Coccidioides immitis a dimorphic fungus (growth
    as a mold at 30oC and as spherules in tissue at
    37oC)
  • Endemic regions Hot desert sands of the San
    Joaquin Valley of California and southern Arizona
  • Most primary pulmonary infections clinically
    inapparent, or present with mild flulike symptoms
    (fever, arthralgia) and varying degrees of cough
    and sputum production

48
Coccidioidomycosis
  • Chronic cavitary pulmonary disease mimicking
    bronchogenic carcinoma or tuberculosis in 2 of
    infected individuals (especially in diabetics)
  • Disseminated coccidioidomycosis involving skin,
    bone, and muscle (AIDS)
  • Air-born spores (arthroconidia) from
    environmental mold forms inhaled causing initial
    pulmonary infection

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Laboratory Diagnosis of Coccidioidomycosis
  • Tissue visualization of thick-walled spherules of
    variable size (10-60 ?m) by methenamine silver
    and PAS stain
  • Spherules partially or completely filled by
    endospores, intact or ruptured, or collapsed with
    no endospores
  • Growth of mold at 30oC with hyphae forming
    alternately light-staining cells and
    dense-staining arthrospores

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Coccidioidomycosis
  • Conversion of Coccidioides immitis to spherule
    form in 37oC culture difficult and requires
    special conditions
  • DNA probe assay or HS exoantigen detection
    utilized instead of spherule conversion to
    confirm culture identification of Coccidioides
    immitis

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Zygomycosis (Mucormycosis)
  • Class Zygomycetes
  • Most common genus Rhizopus
  • Less common genera Mucor, Absidia
  • Hyphae present in tissue (37oC) and culture
    (30oC)
  • Laboratory diagnosis by morphology of sporangia,
    sporangiophores, and vegetative hyphae

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Zygomycosis (Mucormycosis)
  • Rhinocerebral zygomycosis with rapidly developing
    necrosis of tissue in the paranasal and frontal
    sinuses extending into the periorbital tissue,
    and invasion through the cribriform plate into
    the base of the brain
  • Disseminated zygomycosis

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Zygomycosis (Mucormycosis)
  • Inhalation of air-born spores from the
    environment and implantation of spores on the
    nasal mucosa and sinuses
  • Opportunistic infection occurring in debilitated
    patients, especially diabetics with ketoacidosis,
    and leukemic patients neutropenic secondary to
    cytotoxic therapy

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Aspergillosis
  • Most common species A. fumigatus
  • Less common species A. flavus, A. niger, A.
    terreus
  • Laboratory diagnosis by morphology of the
    fruiting body born on the termini of specialized
    spore-forming hyphal cells (conidiophores)

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Aspergillosis
  • Primary diseases Allergic bronchopulmonary
    aspergillosis, aspergilloma (fungus ball),
    invasive infection
  • Aspergillus angiocentric with a strong
    predisposition for blood vessel invasion causing
    occlusive thrombosis and tissue infarction

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Aspergillosis
  • Inhalation of environmental spores and
    implantation in the lungs
  • Contamination of hospital ventilation systems by
    spores, dispersal of soil spores at construction
    sites
  • Immunocompromised patients (leukemia, lymphoma,
    high-dose steroids, AIDS), patients with cystic
    spaces in the lungs (TB cavity, bronchiectasis)

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Recommended Reading
  • Winn, W., Jr., Allen, S., Janda, W., Koneman,
  • E., Procop, G., Schreckenberger, P., Woods,
  • G.
  • Konemans Color Atlas and Textbook of
  • Diagnostic Microbiology, Sixth Edition,
  • Lippincott Williams Wilkins, 2006
  • Chapter 21. Mycology.

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Recommended Reading
  • Murray, P., Baron, E., Jorgensen, J., Landry, M.,
    Pfaller, M.
  • Manual of Clinical Microbiology, 9th Edition, ASM
    Press, 2007
  • Shean, Y.R. Chapter 118. Algorithms for
    Detection and Identification of Fungi.
  • Hazen, K.C., and Howell, S.A. Chapter 119.
    Candida, Cryptococcus, and Other Yeasts of
    Medical Importance.
  • Verweij, P.E., and Brandt, M.E. Chapter 121.
    Aspergillus, Fusarium, and Other Opportunistic
    Moniliaceous Fungi.
  • Richardson, M.D., and Koukila-Kaehkoelae, P.
    Chapter 122. Rhizopus, Rhizomucor, Absidia, and
    Other Agents of Systemic and Subcutaneous
    Zygomycoses.
  • Brandt, ME., and Warnock, D.W. Chapter 123.
    Histoplasma, Blastomyces, Coccidioides, and Other
    Dimorphic Fungi Causing Systemic Mycoses.
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