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fungal infections
RPM II
79
Medical
Graduate
05/15/2010

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Term
what are the endemic mycoses? what kind of fungi are they?
Definition
coccidioidomycosis, histoplasmosis, and blastomycosis; all of which are dimorphic fungi (infectious mold in soil @ 25 C and yeast in tissue @ 37 C)
Term
how are most fungi transmitted?
Definition
inhalation of spores from the environment - not person to person
Term
what is the range of clinical manifestations associated with fungal infection?
Definition
asymptomatic or mild, acute pulmonary disease, chronic pulmonary disease (often associated with COPD), and disseminated disease (more common in immunocompromised pts - AIDS defining illnesses)
Term
how are fungal infections diagnosed?
Definition
clinical presentation, demonstration of the organism in the tissue (usually solid for dx), cx (gold standard, but slow), serology (>4x increase in IgG titer in acute & convalescent serum confirms dx), and skin test (positive result is not diagnostic as it indicates past or present infection and most individuals living in an endemic area are skin test positive. there is also cross reactivity between coccidiodin & histoplasmin)
Term
where is coccidioimycosis found in its environment? how is it found? what form does it take in humans?
Definition
as a mold in the soil in its *arthroconidia (septated hyphae, infectious) form in dry arid areas, southern CA, AZ, etc. in tissue, coccidioidomycosis take its *spherule form which contains endospores (both empty and full spherules are seen in clinical specimens)
Term
when is a common time to see coccidioimycosis outbreaks?
Definition
when a lot of soil is disturbed such as in a construction site
Term
what % of coccidioides cases are mild/asymptomatic? what is the incubation period?
Definition
50-60%. the incubation period is 10-26 days and the infection usually resolves in 3 wks to 3 mos
Term
what are the symptoms of coccidioides infection?
Definition
fever, chest pain, malaise, night sweats and a productive cough
Term
can coccidioides cause skin lesions?
Definition
yes due to an allergic response, ~20% of pts present with erythema nodosum and erythema multiforme (upper trunk & extremities). this occurs mostly in females.
Term
what % of pts will develop a chronic coccidioides infection?
Definition
~10%
Term
when is a coccidioides infection considered chronic? how do pts with a chronic coccidioides infection present?
Definition
coccidioides infections are considered chronic if they last > 3 mos and pts with it present with *calcified nodules, which are 1-3 cm granulomatous rxns, often asymptomatic seen on CXR. *cavitary lesions may also develop in the periphery of the lungs, where the walls are thin. many cavitary lesions are asymptomatic and half spontaneously resolve in 2 yrs. symptoms of these cavitary lesion include a productive cough w/hemoptysis, chest pain, malaise and fever
Term
what is a chronic progressive pulmonary coccidioides infection?
Definition
where coccidioidal infiltrates spread throughout the lung, resulting in a more severe illness w/symptomatic pts, cavities or nodules. symptoms include a productive cough w/hemoptysis, chest pain, malaise, fever, night sweats, weight loss, and anorexia
Term
can coccidioides infections become disseminated?
Definition
yes, and risk factors for this include: immunocompromised pts (HIV, DM, neutropenia), darker-skinned pts, pregnant women, the very young or very old.
Term
where are the most common sites of dissemination w/coccidioides? what is usually associated with dissemination?
Definition
the skin, bones, joints, and meninges. progressive pulmonary disease is usually associated with dissemination.
Term
what characterizes the effects of disseminated coccidioides infections in the skin, musculoskeletal, and meningal areas?
Definition
cutaneous infection: 40%, large verrucous lesions (papules, pustules, nodules, abscesses, ulcers - NOT rash-like) musculoskeletal infection: 20% mainly seen in the vertebral column, pelvis, metacarpal & metatarsal bones, lower extremities. meningitis: 33% seen 3-6 mos after primary infection and presents w/headaches, fever, weakness, confusion, and seizures
Term
where is histoplasma found in its environment? how is it found? what form does it take in humans?
Definition
histoplasma capsulatum is found as a mold in soil containing *bird/bat guano. this mold has sepate, branching hyphae and is referred to as tuberculate macroconidia. the form of histoplasma found in humans *does not have a capsule, it proliferates intracellularly within *macrophages and clinical speciments demonstrate *intracellular yeast
Term
where is histoplasmosis endemic?
Definition
along the ohio and mississippi river valleys
Term
what is the pathogenesis of histoplasmosis?
Definition
the spores are inhaled and develop into yeast cells in the airways. macrophages then ingest the yeast and migrate to the mediastinal lymph nodes and RES (liver & spleen). caseous lesions then develop and calcify - typically in the lungs, lymph nodes, liver and spleen
Term
what are the clinical manifestations of histoplasmosis?
Definition
acute pulmonary histoplasmosis (usually mild & self limiting), chronic pulmonary histoplasmosis, disseminated disease (infants, immunosuppressed pts, pts on steroids), and mediastinal granulomas
Term
what characterizes the acute pulmonary disease due to histoplasma?
Definition
acute pulmonary disease is asymptomatic or presents as mild cold-like in 60-90% of pts. a minority may develop fever, headache, chills, nonproductive cough, malaise and anorexia. pts may have hepatosplenomegaly, adeonopathy, rashes (erythema nodosum or multiforma). there may be residual lung calcification and or a positive skin test and anti-fungal meds are usually not necessary
Term
what characterizes chronic progressive pulmonary disease due to histoplasma?
Definition
this usually occurs in elderly males as a complication of underlying pulmonary disease such as emphysema. it may start as an interstitial pneumonia and then form cavitations w/caseation in the lungs (resembles TB). symptoms include: fever, chills, weight loss, malaise, and a productive cough (hemoptysis)
Term
how does disseminated disease occur with histoplasma infections?
Definition
histoplasma spreads via the lymphatics and blood within macrophages through the tissue of the RES (spleen, liver, lymph nodes, and bone marrow).
Term
what is acute disseminated histoplasmosis?
Definition
acute disseminated histoplasmosis is seen primarily in infants, involves extensive RES involvement and presents with fever, severe hepatosplenomegaly, lymphadenopathy, weight loss, nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea.
Term
what is subacute disseminated histoplasmosis?
Definition
sub acute disseminated histoplasmosis involves moderate RES involvement, focal lesions in different organs (GI and oropharyngeal ulcers)
Term
what is chronic disseminated histoplasmosis?
Definition
chronic disseminated histoplasmosis is seen primarily in adults and features the mildest RES involvement, mildest symptoms including oropharyngeal ulcers, gradual weight loss, and fatigue
Term
where is blastomyces found in its environment? how is it found? what form does it take in humans?
Definition
blastomyces grows as a mold in nature but is hard to isolate. in tissue it grows as an extracellular yeast that is thick walled and broad-budding
Term
where is the endemic area for blastomyces?
Definition
most of the histoplasma area, though farther north
Term
what are the clinical manifestations of blastomycosis?
Definition
acute and chronic pneumonia and disseminated disease affecting the skin (most common), bones, joints, GU, and CNS
Term
what characterizes an acute blastomyces infection? chronic?
Definition
acute blastomyces infection: an incubation period of 21-100 days followed by nothing or symptoms of pneumonia (fever, chills, myalgias, chest pain, nonproductive cough) and an inflammatory response that may form a *noncaseous granuloma* that can reactivate. chronic blastomyces infection: productive cough, hemoptysis, weight loss, chest pain, and low-grade fever
Term
how often will cutaneous blastomycosis disseminate to the skin if it disseminates? what characterizes this event?
Definition
cutaneous blastomycosis disseminates to the skin 40-80% of the time, generally accompanied by active pulmonary disease. subcutaneous nodules may ulcerate form - along with verrucous lesions (small papulopustular lesions that spread and crust over) and ulcerative lesions (pustules w/raised borders, red tissue that bleeds easily)
Term
how often will blastomycoses disseminate to the bone/joint if it disseminates? GU? CNS?
Definition
blastomycoses will disseminate to the bone and joint 10-50% of the time (generally painless), to the GU 30% of the time (prostate+epididymis in men), and to the CNS 5-10% of the time manifesting as *brain abscesses* w/headaches, confusion, coma, seizures
Term
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Definition
Term
what are the 3 kinds of fungal sinusitis?
Definition
noninvasive (seen in immunocompetent pts), invasive (seen in immunocompromised pts, spreads through direct bone invasion, often w/intracranial and orbital involvement - rhinocerebral disease), and allergic fungal sinusitis (host immune response rxn)
Term
who usually gets allergic fungal sinusitis?
Definition
young adults w/asthma & allergies severe enough to cause obstruction of sinuses and recurrent nasal polyps
Term
what characterizes allergic fungal sinusitis? how is it diagnosed?
Definition
the allergic rxn is comprised of mucin secretion, an inflammatory response, IgE, and immune complexes against the fungal antigens. bone erosion and deformites may occur and allergic fungal sinusitis is diagnosed by histologic staining of clinical specimens (eosinophilic infiltrates & fungal hyphae confirmed by cx)
Term
what is the most common fungal cause of sinusitis?
Definition
aspergillus, which can cause rhinocerebral disease in neutropenic pts
Term
what fungi commonly causes rhinocerebral disease in DM pts?
Definition
zygomycetes or mucor (rhizopus, absidia, and rhizomucor are all related)
Term
what kind of fungi cause phaeohyphomycoses?
Definition
dematiaceous fungi, which are brown/black fungi found in the soil and primarily opportunistic
Term
where is aspergillis found? what form does it take? what kinds of infections can it cause?
Definition
aspergillis is a ubiquitous mold found in soil and plants, frequently isolated from ventilation systems. it has septated hyphae w/chains of conidia on conidiaphore. the types of infections it causes include: allergic, chronic, and invasive. it is only a mold - not dimorphic, so what you see in nature will be seen on a clinical specimen
Term
what characterizes allergic aspergillosis?
Definition
inhaled spores settle in the bronchi and trigger an asthmatic response mediated by IgE, leading to rhinitis and wheezing. approx 40% of pts develop a positive skin test
Term
what characterizes acute sinusitis due to aspergillis?
Definition
this can occur in pts w/allergic rhinitis, chronic nasal congestion, and recurrent sinusitis - it may also co-exist w/bacterial sinusitis
Term
can acute sinusitis due to aspergillis become invasive?
Definition
yes, in neutropenic pts, aspergillis spreads from nasal mucosa or sinuses to adjacent structures resulting in vascular invasion and necrosis causing headache, sinus pain, proptosis, and monocular blindness
Term
what is allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis (ABPA)?
Definition
this hypersensitivity rxn to aspergillus antigen occurs in pts w/asthma and is a chronic inflammatory response consisting of an intermittent fever & productive cough (brown mucus containing hyphae). it is however, not invasive. pts w/this may develop a steroid-dependent asthma or COPD
Term
what are the criteria for diagnosing ABPA?
Definition
episodic bronchial obstruction (asthma), eosinophilia, a positive skin test to aspergillus antigens (type 1 hypersensitivity), increased IgE and IgG antibodies to aspergillus antigens, a hx of pulmonary infiltrates and episodic bronchial plugging leading to bronchietasis
Term
what is an aspergilloma? does it require anything to form?
Definition
colonization of the pulmonary cavity/dead areas in the lung or sinuses, forming a fungus ball consisting of hyphae, mucus, host tissue/debris and some inflammatory cells. it may be asymptomatic or cause a productive cough w/hemoptysis and CXRs will show a mass separated from the cavity wall by an air space. *to form it requires pre-existing conditions include TB, CA, sarcoidosis, histoplasmosis, emphysema, and bronchiectasis to form.*
Term
what is the course of a pulmonary aspergillosis?
Definition
inhalation of conida (macrophages try to clear spores), the conidia form hyphae, complement is activated (neutrophil chemotatic factors are released leading to an influx of neutrophils), and invasive disease results if neutrophils are unable to conatain the hyphae
Term
what are the symptoms of invasive pulmonary aspergillosis?
Definition
fever, non-productive cough or hemoptysis, tachycardia, and pulmonary infiltrates seen on x-ray.
Term
can invasive pulmonary aspergillosis lead to pulmonary infarcts?
Definition
yes, if the blood vessels are invaded, pulmonary infarcts are possible - resulting in chest pain and pleuritic rubs. a CT scan may reveal ring-enhancing lesions as a halo surrounding a denser consolidated area
Term
can invasive pulmonary aspergillosis become chronic?
Definition
yes chronic pulmonary aspergillosis can progress to a necrotizing pulmonary lesion, accompanied by persistent fever and hemoptysis. this is seen most often in AIDs pts, diabetics, and those with chronic granulomatous disease
Term
what are the risk factors for invasive aspergillosis?
Definition
immunosuppression (esp neutropenia), use of broad spectrum antimicrobials, corticosteroid use, bone marrow & solid organ transplantation
Term
what happens when hyphae invade blood vessels?
Definition
angioinvasion leads to obstruction, ischemia, infarction, tissue necrosis and may seed other organs (other parts of the lung, brain, liver, heart, spleen, and skin)
Term
what is a dx of invasive aspergillosis based on?
Definition
clinical symptoms and histopathology: demonstration of branching, septate hyphae in clinical specimen - sputum/transtracheal aspirate/bronchial/lung bx. a cx from sputum doesn't necessarily mean the disease is invasive - hyphae needs to be seen in the tissue for that dx (consider the pts risk for invasive aspergillosis). indirect testing for invasive disease: galactomannan ELISA and fungitell assays are also available
Term
when should presumptive invasive aspergillosus be treated?
Definition
high risk pts (neutropenic, aspergillus isolated in clinical specimen, fever, CXR/CT consistent with aspergillosis) should be treated. low risk pts (solid organ transplants, CA, chronic granulomatous disease, and HIV) can be bxed first
Term
what is important for IDing aspergillus in sputum?
Definition
its acute angle branching septated hyphae b/c it is a mold
Term
what organisms cause zygomycosis?
Definition
zygomycosis or mucormycosis is caused by: mucor, rhizopus, absidia, and rhizomucor - which are all zygomycetes
Term
where are zygomycetes/mucor found?
Definition
they are ubiquitous - found on bread and spoiled food
Term
what is the shape of zygomycetes/mucor?
Definition
broad, *nonseptate hyphae* (differentiates zygomycetes from aspergillus)
Term
how is zygomycosis contracted?
Definition
zygomycetes/mucor colonize nasal, oropharyngeal or respiratory mucosa when spores are inhaled
Term
how do zygomycetes/mucor invade the tissue? who is at risk for this?
Definition
hyphae invade the lumen and walls of blood vessels most commonly of granulocytopenic and acidotic pts (esp diabetics) who are at high risk for invasive disease
Term
what is another difference beside hyphae between zygomycetes and aspergillus?
Definition
zygomycetes have round spores, while aspergillus has condidia radiating out
Term
what are the types of infections seen with zygomycetes?
Definition
*rhinocerebral (seen in DM pts), pulmonary, abdominal/pelvic & gastrointestinal, primary cutaneous, and disseminated disease
Term
when does zygomycetes usually cause rhinocerebral disease? how does the infection occur? what is the clinical course?
Definition
in acidotic DM pts via an initial infection in the nasal region which spreads the sinuses, eye, brain, and meninges. the infection results in fever, facial pain, headaches, nasal congestion, visual disturbances, and lethargy - can be fatal in 2 wks
Term
who does zygomycetes commonly cause pulmonary disease in? how does the infection occur? what is the clinical course?
Definition
pts w/leukemia, severe neutropenia (neutrophils are important for clearing fungi) or on steroid therapy. it starts as bronchtis/lobular pneumonia and progresses to a fever, productive cough w/hemoptysis, chest pain and SOB. through invasion of the blood vessels and destruction of lung tissue, zygomycetes can spread via blood to the CNS, liver, kidney, spleen, heart, and skin - causing necrosis and abscess formation
Term
who does zygomycetes tend to cause GI infections in?
Definition
malnourished pts or those w/renal failure. this leads to necrotic ulcers in the stomach and colon
Term
who does zygomycetes tend to cause cutaneous infections in?
Definition
usually burn pts or as a result of disseminated disease. usually single lesions develop into necrotic ulcers w/dark centers
Term
what are the predisposing conditions for zygomycetes causing rhinocerebral disease, pulmonary disease, cutaneous infection, and GI infection?
Definition
rhinocerebral disease-> DM pts, pulmonary disease_->neutropenic pts, cutaneous infection->burn pts, and GI infection-> malnutrition
Term
what do the hyphae look like for zygomycetes?
Definition
nonseptated, ribbon-like
Term
what are the 3 forms of pneumocystis jiroveci? how is it spread? what is the rate of exposure?
Definition
pneumocystis jiroveci comes in 2 forms cysts and trophs. the cysts are larger and more prevalent in clinical symptoms and have 8 intracystic bodies that can rupture and release the intracystic bodies as trophs. trophs are haploid and can split by fission or fuse and form cysts. it is spread person to person via aerosol and can be dormant in the lung. >50% of the population is seropositive by 2-4 yrs of age. it is considered an AIDS defining illness and pneumocystis jiroveci may simply reactivate in these immunocompromise pts
Term
what are the in situ pneumocystis jiroveci cysts often described as?
Definition
"collapsed ping pong balls"
Term
what are some of the symptoms of pneumocystis pneumonia?
Definition
fever, dyspnea, dry/productive cough, hypoxemia, and diffuse bilateral infitrates on a CXR
Term
what characterizes pneumocystis pneumonia as an AIDS defining illness? can it disseminate?
Definition
~80% of AIDS pts have it at some point, it was a leading cause of death in AIDS before prophylaxis and it can disseminated to the spleen, lymph nodes and bone marrow
Term
what is the DOC for pneumocystis pneumonia? other drugs?
Definition
trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, which disrupts the synthesis of *tetrahydrofolic acid. it is used as tx or prophylaxis in AIDS or neutropenic pts. echinocandins are also active against pneumocystis jiroveci via inhibition of glucan synthase, which disrupts cell wall synthesis (primary drug for candida)
Term
what kind of pathogen is penicillium marneffi?
Definition
penicillium marneffi is a dimorphic fungus endemic to SE asia (mold in soil/vegetation, intracellular yeast in macrophages). the bamboo rat is thought to be the animal reservoir and it most frequently infects the lung and liver. it is an AIDS defining illness in thailand
Term
what are the clinical symptoms associated with penicillosis?
Definition
fever, cough, lymphadenopathy, pulmonary infiltrates, hepatosplenomegaly, *subcutaneous abscess, and *papular skin lesions
Term
what is seen histologically in a clinical specimen from a pt w/penicillosis?
Definition
small, oval yeast cell withing macrophages or extracellular sausage-like forms wtih septa
Term
what is the treatment for penicillosis?
Definition
amphotericin B (2 wks) then itraconazole (10 wks)
Term
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Definition
Term
what is a potentially lethal fungus moving south from canada?
Definition
cryptococcus gattii (related to cryptococcus neoformans which caused meningitis in immunocompromised pts) infects healthy people who have contact w/soid or trees
Term
what are the clinical symptoms of pts infected with cryptococcus gattii? tx?
Definition
coughing, night sweats, pneumonia, wt loss over wks, possibly meningitis. tx is 6-8 wks of IV antifungals (amphotericin B) and up to 6 mos of oral fluconazole
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