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Aspergillosis Zygomycosis Hyalohyphomycosis Endemic mycoses R Lin

Aspergillus and systemic mycoses

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Lecture to NP students 6 May 2013

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Page 1: Aspergillus and systemic mycoses

AspergillosisZygomycosis

HyalohyphomycosisEndemic mycoses

R Lin

Page 2: Aspergillus and systemic mycoses

Good internet resource

www.drfungus.org

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Fungal infections

• Most fungal infections are opportunistic – candida is the most common, causing skin and soft tissue infection– Severe infection (mucous membrane,

oesophagus) in AIDS– Systemic infection in neutropenic

• Aspergillus– Opportunistic, and affects the most severely

neutropenic

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Aspergillosis

• Found in the air all around us• Harmless to normal people – we inhale

hundreds of condidia every day• Opportunistic disease in the

immunocompromised patient– Severe neutropenia– Debilitating disease– Disruption of normal flora– Antibiotics, steroids– Abnormal lung e.g. bronchiectasis, cancer

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Page 6: Aspergillus and systemic mycoses

Aspergillus

• >200 species

• Associated with disease: *A. fumigatus, A. flavus, A. niger

• Less common: A. nidulans, A. terreus, A. oryzae, A. ustus, A. versicolor

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Laboratory identification

• Grows on Sabouraud agar

• Colony – colour: black, yellow, green, white, red, brown

• 3 structures to recognize– Mycelium - branching, hyaline, septate– Condial head – Condidia : shape and arrange help identify

species

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A. fumigatusA. flavus

A. niger

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Spectrum of disease

• Colonization: sinuses, lungs• Toxicosis: aflatoxin (A. flavus)• Allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis:

sinuses, lungs• Pulmonary aspergilloma: pre-existing lung

cavity• Invasive aspergillosis: pulmonary, sinonasal,

central nervous system, endocarditis, renal• Others e.g. otomycosis (A. niger)

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Invasive aspergillosis

• Most commonly in severely neutropenic e.g. after bone marrow transplant

• Portal of entry: sinuses, lungs• Difficult to diagnose

– Clinical suspicion, radiology, laboratory tests

• Difficult to treat– Amphotericin B, voriconazole, itraconazole– Surgical resection

• Poor outcome

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Page 16: Aspergillus and systemic mycoses

Laboratory investigation

• Microscopy: KOH prep, sputum, bronchoalveolar lavage

• Histology: lung

• Culture: sputum (contaminant?), BAL, tissue

• Galactomannan EIA

• PCR: 18sRNA gene, not always useful

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Galactomannan EIA

• Monitor post-transplant

• patient 2x / week

• Rising value or high value + symptoms

• False-positives– Penicillin-containing antibiotic– Milk, cereals

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Zygomycosis

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Rhizopus arrhizus (oryzae)

• Title: Characteristic sporangial production• Disease(s): Zygomycosis

• Legend: Nodal rhizoids, sporangiophore, “umbrella-shaped” collapsed columella, and sporangiospores.

Potato flakes agar tease mount. Color enhanced.

• Genus/Species: Rhizopus arrhizus (oryzae)• Image Type: Microscopic Morphology

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Mucor speciesh

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• Slide Reference #: GK 593• Genus/Species: Mucor species

• Disease(s): Systemic Zygomycosis (Mucormycosis)

• Image Type: Microscopic Morphology

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Many species

• e.g. Mucor spp., Absidia spp., Rhizopus spp., Rhizomucor spp., Cunninghamella spp.

• Widely found in the environment

• Immunocompromised patients at risk (as for aspergillus), trauma patients

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Zygomycosis: disease

• Invade the bloodstream – disseminated disease

• Local invasion – pulmonary, rhinocerebral

• Intravenous drug use - cerebral infection

• Cutaneous – burns, trauma

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treatment

• Very high mortality - 96% for disseminated disease

• Surgery and antifungals

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Zygomycosis – laboratory diagnosis• Tissue – histology

• Culture from deep sites (beware contamination!) e.g. rhinocerebral, BSL

• That’s all we have lab tests!

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“Hyalohyphomycosis”

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• Hyaline septate hyphae

• Non-pigmented

• No differentiating features

• Many species of fungi

• When cultured – some are distinct and can be identified

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e.g. Fusarium sp.

• Common in soil, plant, environment

• Typical macroconidia

• cause– Keratitis e.g. with contact lens– Invasive disseminated disease in

neutropenic– Skin and subcutaneous lesions in

disseminated disease

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Fusarium dimerum

• Title: ---• Disease(s): ---

• Legend: ---

• Genus/Species: Fusarium dimerum• Image Type: Microscopic Morphology

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e.g. Penicillium marneffei

• Most penicillium harmless

• P. marneffei– Dimorphic – yeast 37 deg C, mould 25 deg C– Disseminated to the blood in AIDS patients in

SE Asia– Fever, skin, liver, spleen, multi-organ

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Penicillium marneffeih

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• Slide Reference #: GK 488• Genus/Species: Penicillium marneffei • Disease(s): Penicilliosis marneffei• Image Type: Macroscopic Morphology

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Penicillium marneffeih

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• Slide Reference #: GK 489• Genus/Species: Penicillium marneffei • Disease(s): Penicilliosis marneffei• Image Type: Microscopic Morphology

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Pigmented moulds

• Dihydroxynaphthalene melanin in their cell walls

• Many many species of fungi• Many types of infection – skin, brain, lung

etc• Chronic tissue infections

– chromoblastomycosis– mycetoma

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Curvularia lunatah

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• Slide Reference #: GK 472• Genus/Species: Curvularia lunata

• Disease(s): Mycotic keratitis• Image Type: Microscopic Morphology

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Madurella grisea

• Title: Mycetoma• Disease(s): Mycetoma

• Legend: Sclerotium in tissue of the foot, H & E stain.

• Genus/Species: Madurella grisea• Image Type: Histopathology

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Madurella mycetomatis

• Title: Mycetoma• Disease(s): Mycetoma

• Legend: Multiple draining sinuses, swollen tissue, and sclerotia are present.

• Genus/Species: Madurella mycetomatis• Image Type: Clinical Presentation

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ENDEMIC MYCOSES

• Coccidioidomycosis• Histoplasmosis• Blastomycosis• Paracoccidioidomycosis

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Endemic mycoses

• thermally dimorphic fungi– As moulds in the soil– Yeast forms in the human body (37 deg C)

• Geographic distribution varies• Inhalation pulmonary INFECTION

dissemination • No evidence of transmission among humans

or animals• Otherwise healthy individuals are infected

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Endemic mycoses

• Geographical location is important. Get history of travel; except histoplasmosis (worldwide)

• Clinical suspicion: liver/spleen/lungs/ mucocutaneous involved

• May have no symptoms• Route of infection: through lungs or direct

inoculation of skin• Cause skin lesions, pneumonia, liver/spleen

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Tests for systemic mycoses

• Microscopy• Fungal culture (2 temperatures!)• Tissue: histopathology• Serology – often older methods like

immunodiffusion, complement fixation• Skin test of limited value• Others: urinary antigen (e.g.

histoplasma)

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COCCIDIOIDOMYCOSISAetiology: Coccidioides immitis

Location: Confined to southwestern US, northern Mexico, Central and South America

Microscopy

-Tissue 37°C: Spherules filled with endospores

- 25°C: hyphae, barrel-shaped arthroconidia

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Case historyA 71-year-old male subject regularly spends several winter

months in Arizona to play golf in the sun. Last March he experienced a gradual onset of fever and a headache,

followed by a non-productive cough, myalgia and profound fatigue. His local physician diagnosed bronchopneumonia on chest radiograph, and prescribed azithromycin. The antibiotic provided no benefit, and ultimately the patient received two more courses of different empiric antibiotics. He returned home with continued cough and fatigue, even though the

fever had abated somewhat. Two months following the initial onset of symptoms, a bronchoscopy was performed, and

cultures grew Coccidioides species.

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Other presentationsMonths to years following a symptomatic or asymptomatic

infection, the affected lung may show complete resolution or an area of calcified or uncalcified pulmonary nodule similar

radiographically to cancer. Microscopic examination of excised tissue identifies the organism. Occasionally the nodule liquefies to form a thin-walled cavity, which may close spontaneously or remain and become a nidus for

suprainfection or spontaneous pneumothorax. Extrapulmonary dissemination can be identified in nearly all tissues, although skin and soft tissue, bones and meninges

are the most common sites of dissemination. Chronic fibrocavitary pneumonia is seen infrequently, with chronic cough and dyspnoea, night sweats and weight loss, and

lung fibrosis with thick-walled cavities.

From BMJ Best Practice

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Coccidioides immitis

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Coccidioides immitis

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Disseminated coccidioidomycosis

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Histoplasma capsulatum

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HISTOPLASMOSIS• Aetiology: Histoplasma capsulatum

• Natural reservoir: soil, bat and avian habitats• Location: May be prevalent all over the world, but

the incidence varies widely • Microscopy

– Yeast cell in tissue (37°C)– Hyphae, microconidia and macroconidia

(tuberculate chlamydospore) at 25 °C

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Histoplasma capsulatum

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Histoplasma

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Blastomyces dermatitidis

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BLASTOMYCOSIS

• Aetiology: Blastomyces dermatitidis

• Location: America, Africa, Asia

• Microscopy: – Yeasts at 37°C: bud is attached to the

parent cell by a broad base – Hyphae and conidia at 25 °C

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Blastomycosis

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Paracoccidioides brasiliensis

Page 58: Aspergillus and systemic mycoses

PARACOCCIDIOIDOMYCOSIS

• Aetiology: Paracoccidioides brasiliensis• Location: Central and South America• Pathogenesis: Inhalation of conidia• Microscopy

– At 37°C (in tissue ): multiply budding yeasts; the buds are attached to the parent cell by a narrow base

– At 25 °C: hyphae and conidia