Dimorphic fungi: Difference between revisions
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*Fungi that exist in a mold form at lower temperatures in the environment, and a yeast form at higher temperatures in the host body |
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*[[Cryptococcus]] does exhibit dimorphism, though it is predominately yeast and its dimorphism is not likely related to disease |
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{| class="wikitable" |
{| class="wikitable" |
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!Organism |
!Organism |
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!Treatment |
!Treatment |
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|- |
|- |
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|[[Blastomyces |
|[[Blastomyces]] |
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|eastern US and Canada, with some reported in Africa |
|eastern US and Canada, with some reported in Africa |
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|pulmonary infection, verrucous skin lesions, osteomyelitis, CNS infection |
|pulmonary infection, verrucous skin lesions, osteomyelitis, CNS infection |
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|[[itraconazole]] (with [[amphotericin B]] induction if severe) |
|[[itraconazole]] (with [[amphotericin B]] induction if severe) |
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|- |
|- |
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|[[Coccidioides |
|[[Coccidioides]] |
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|southwestern US and parts of South and Central America |
|southwestern US and parts of South and Central America |
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|pulmonary infection, verrucous skin lesions, osteomyelitis, CNS infection |
|pulmonary infection, verrucous skin lesions, osteomyelitis, CNS infection |
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|[[fluconazole]] (with [[amphotericin B]] and [[flucytosine]] induction if severe) |
|[[fluconazole]] (with [[amphotericin B]] and [[flucytosine]] induction if severe) |
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|- |
|- |
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|[[ |
|[[Histoplasma capsulatum]] |
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|worldwide, including eastern North America, Central and South America, sub-Saharan Africa, and parts of Southeast Asia |
|worldwide, including eastern North America, Central and South America, sub-Saharan Africa, and parts of Southeast Asia |
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|pulmonary infection, CNS infection |
|pulmonary infection, CNS infection |
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|[[amphotericin B]] induction followed by [[itraconazole]] |
|[[amphotericin B]] induction followed by [[itraconazole]] |
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|} |
|} |
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== |
==Background== |
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===Microbiology=== |
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*Broad category of fungi that exist in a mold form at lower temperatures in the environment, and a yeast form at higher temperatures in the host body |
|||
*[[Cryptococcus]] does exhibit dimorphism, though it is predominately yeast and its dimorphism is not likely related to disease |
|||
*Often referred to as endemic fungi based on their geographic niches |
|||
*Includes the following genera and species: |
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**[[Blastomyces]], including Blastomyces dermatitidis complex ([[Blastomyces dermatitidis]] and [[Blastomyces gilchristii]]), helices, silverae, parvus |
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**[[Histoplasma capsulatum]] (var. ''capsulatum'' and var. ''duboisii'') |
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**[[Coccidiodes]], including [[Coccidioides immitis]] and [[Coccidioides posadasii]] |
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**[[Paracoccidioides]], including [[Paracoccidioides brasiliensis]] and [[Paracoccidioides lutzii]] |
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**[[Talaromyces marneffei]] |
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**[[Emergomyces]], including [[Emergomyces pasteurianus]], [[Emergomyces africanus]], [[Emergomyces orientalis]], [[Emergomyces canadensis]], [[Emergomyces europaeus]] |
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**[[Sporothrix]] complex (Sporothrix brasiliensis, Sporothrix schenckii, Sporothrix globose, Sporothrix luriei) |
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===Epidemiology=== |
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*Endemic dimorphic fungi are widely distributed[[CiteRef::PMID32040709]] |
*Endemic dimorphic fungi are widely distributed[[CiteRef::PMID32040709]] |
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=== |
====Histoplasmosis==== |
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[[File:Histoplasmosis_map.png|Histoplasmosis|alt=|thumb|300x300px]] |
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*High-endemic areas include Ohio and Mississippi river valley systems, but also in Central and South America |
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**However, 12-20% of cases in US occur outside of endemic areas |
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**In Canada, mostly along St. Lawrence seaway and Great Lakes drainage |
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*More recently, cases have been diagnosed in Alberta and Saskatchewan |
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*Also found in Asia and Africa, throughout, with var. duboisii in West Africa (mostly skin and soft tissue disease) |
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*Associated with soil contaminated by bird or bat guano |
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====Coccidiomycosis==== |
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[[File:Coccidiomycosis_map.png|Coccidiomycosis|alt=|thumb|300x300px]] |
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*More common in southwestern US, especially California and Arizona (but up to Washington state), as well as parts of South and Central America |
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**Concentrated heavily in San Joaquin Valley in California |
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*Present in soil |
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*High-risk activities: construction, military maneuvers, earthquakes/landslides, armadillo hunting, prisoners from other parts of the US that are incarcerated in California |
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====Blastomycosis==== |
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[[File:Blastomycosis_map.png|Blastomycosis|alt=|thumb|300x300px]] |
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*Found mostly in eastern North America |
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**In Canada, found in northwestern Ontario, Quebec, Manitoba, and Saskatchewan |
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***Kenora is the hotspot in Canada |
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*More common in wooded areas, damp soil, and near waterways |
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*High-risk activities include excavation and construction |
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====Emergomycosis==== |
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*Different species found worldwide, including [[Emergomyces canadensis]] in Saskatchewan, Colorado, and New Mexico |
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*More common in HIV patients or other immunocompromised |
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==Clinical Manifestations== |
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===Histoplasmosis=== |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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! |
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!Acute Pulmonary |
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!Cavitary and Chronic Pulmonary |
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!Progressive Disseminated |
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|- |
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|Clinical |
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|usually asymptomatic or mild; can have non-pleuritic chest pain from mediastinal or hilar lymphadenopathy; can have rheumatic features or pericarditis |
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|8% develop fibrocavitary disease, associated with underlying [[COPD]] |
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| |
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|- |
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|Immunology |
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|>90% positive skin test, 20% urine antigen |
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|75-95% antibodyes, 40% urine antigen |
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|60-90% urine antigen |
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|- |
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|Culture |
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|<25% positive |
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|5-70% positive (more likely if cavitary) |
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|50-70% positive |
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|} |
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===Blastomycosis=== |
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*Inhalation is main portal of entry |
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*Incubation 3 weeks to 3 months |
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*In outbreaks, 50% of exposed developed symptoms |
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*Primarily presents with pulmonary blastomycosis with influenza-like illness, acute pneumonia, ARDS, or chronic pneumonia |
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*Skin is most common extrapulmonary site, but can also infect bone and prostate |
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*CNS infection is rare |
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===Coccidiomycosis=== |
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*Asymptaomtic common in 60% |
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*Early pulmonary infection |
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**Mild |
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**Valley fever, including arthralgias and erythema nodosum |
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*Extrapulmonary dissemination |
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**More common in African Americans |
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===Emergomycosis=== |
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*Cutaneous disease in immunocompromised patients, especially advanced HIV |
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*Can also cause pulmonary disease, extrapulmonary disease, or disseminated |
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==Diagnosis== |
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*Notify laboratory if a [[Biosafety risk groups|risk group 3]] organism is suspected |
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*For blood cultures, the isolator system is preferred to BacTAlert |
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*Media |
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**Brain-heart infusion with sheep blood plus antibacterials is preferred |
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**Cycloheximide can be used to prevent growth of saprophytic molds (always with one plate without) |
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**Incubate at 30ºC to enhance growth of mold forms |
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**Incubated for 3 weeks for fungi in general, but should be extended to 4 weeks for dimorphic fungi |
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***[[Coccidioides]] is the fastest-growing, within 3 to 5 days on SAB, and can grow on chocolate and sheep's blood agars |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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!Organism |
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!Findings on Microscopy |
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|- |
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|[[Histoplasma]] |
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|intracellular 2-4 μm yeast-like cells in macrophages, may have narrow-based budding |
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|- |
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|[[Blastomyces]] |
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|8-15 μm yeast-like cells with broad-based budding, refractile thick cell wall, but early spherules can be confused with [[Coccioides]] |
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|- |
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|[[Coccidioides]] |
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|spherules are thick-walled, 10-80 μm with endospores; alternating barrel-shaped arthroconidia in mycelial form |
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|- |
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|[[Marneffei]] |
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|divides by binary fission |
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|- |
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|[[Emergomyces]] |
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|2.5-5 μm small yeast form with narrow-based budding; septate hyphae with conidiophores at right answers, with conidia clustered in florettes of 2 to 3 conidia |
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|} |
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===EORTC Definition[[CiteRef::donnelly2019re]]=== |
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*'''Proven invasive fungal disease''' |
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[[File:Histoplasmosis_map.png|frame|Histoplasmosis]] |
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**Histopathology or direct microscopy of sterile material of specimens obtained from an affected site showing the distinctive form of the fungus, or |
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**Recovery by culture of sterile material of the fungus from specimens from an affected site, or |
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**Blood culture that yields the fungus |
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*'''Probable invasive fungal disease''' |
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**Requires clinical features and mycologic evidence, but host does not have to be immunocompromised for dimorphic or endemic fungi |
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**Host factors: not applicable |
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**Clinical features: evidence for geographical or occupational exposure (including remote) to the fungus and compatible clinical illness |
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**Mycological evidence: |
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***[[Histoplasma]] or [[Blastomyces]] antigen in urine, serum, or body fluid |
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***Antibody to [[Coccidioides]] in CSF or 2-fold rise in 2 consecutive serum samples |
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==Prevention== |
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=== Coccidiomycosis === |
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===Laboratory Safety=== |
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[[File:Coccidiomycosis_map.png|frame|Coccidiomycosis]] |
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*Many are [[Biosafety risk groups|risk group 3]] and need to notify lab if suspected |
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=== Blastomycosis === |
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*Opening the plates outside of a BSC is one of the highest risk actions |
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[[Category:Fungi]] |
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[[File:Blastomycosis_map.png|frame|Blastomycosis]] |
Latest revision as of 21:09, 7 March 2024
Organism | Distribution | Diseases | Treatment |
---|---|---|---|
Blastomyces | eastern US and Canada, with some reported in Africa | pulmonary infection, verrucous skin lesions, osteomyelitis, CNS infection | itraconazole (with amphotericin B induction if severe) |
Coccidioides | southwestern US and parts of South and Central America | pulmonary infection, verrucous skin lesions, osteomyelitis, CNS infection | fluconazole (with amphotericin B and flucytosine induction if severe) |
Histoplasma capsulatum | worldwide, including eastern North America, Central and South America, sub-Saharan Africa, and parts of Southeast Asia | pulmonary infection, CNS infection | itraconazole (with amphotericin B induction if severe) |
Paracoccidioides brasiliensis | South America | pulmonary infection | itraconazole (with amphotericin B induction if severe) |
Sporothrix schenckii | essentially worldwide | nodular lymphangitis | itraconazole |
Talaromyces marneffei | Southeast Asia | disseminated (common in advanced HIV), pulmonary infection, abdominal abscess, skin lesions, osteomyelitis | amphotericin B induction followed by itraconazole |
Background
Microbiology
- Broad category of fungi that exist in a mold form at lower temperatures in the environment, and a yeast form at higher temperatures in the host body
- Cryptococcus does exhibit dimorphism, though it is predominately yeast and its dimorphism is not likely related to disease
- Often referred to as endemic fungi based on their geographic niches
- Includes the following genera and species:
- Blastomyces, including Blastomyces dermatitidis complex (Blastomyces dermatitidis and Blastomyces gilchristii), helices, silverae, parvus
- Histoplasma capsulatum (var. capsulatum and var. duboisii)
- Coccidiodes, including Coccidioides immitis and Coccidioides posadasii
- Paracoccidioides, including Paracoccidioides brasiliensis and Paracoccidioides lutzii
- Talaromyces marneffei
- Emergomyces, including Emergomyces pasteurianus, Emergomyces africanus, Emergomyces orientalis, Emergomyces canadensis, Emergomyces europaeus
- Sporothrix complex (Sporothrix brasiliensis, Sporothrix schenckii, Sporothrix globose, Sporothrix luriei)
Epidemiology
- Endemic dimorphic fungi are widely distributed1
Histoplasmosis
- High-endemic areas include Ohio and Mississippi river valley systems, but also in Central and South America
- However, 12-20% of cases in US occur outside of endemic areas
- In Canada, mostly along St. Lawrence seaway and Great Lakes drainage
- More recently, cases have been diagnosed in Alberta and Saskatchewan
- Also found in Asia and Africa, throughout, with var. duboisii in West Africa (mostly skin and soft tissue disease)
- Associated with soil contaminated by bird or bat guano
Coccidiomycosis
- More common in southwestern US, especially California and Arizona (but up to Washington state), as well as parts of South and Central America
- Concentrated heavily in San Joaquin Valley in California
- Present in soil
- High-risk activities: construction, military maneuvers, earthquakes/landslides, armadillo hunting, prisoners from other parts of the US that are incarcerated in California
Blastomycosis
- Found mostly in eastern North America
- In Canada, found in northwestern Ontario, Quebec, Manitoba, and Saskatchewan
- Kenora is the hotspot in Canada
- In Canada, found in northwestern Ontario, Quebec, Manitoba, and Saskatchewan
- More common in wooded areas, damp soil, and near waterways
- High-risk activities include excavation and construction
Emergomycosis
- Different species found worldwide, including Emergomyces canadensis in Saskatchewan, Colorado, and New Mexico
- More common in HIV patients or other immunocompromised
Clinical Manifestations
Histoplasmosis
Acute Pulmonary | Cavitary and Chronic Pulmonary | Progressive Disseminated | |
---|---|---|---|
Clinical | usually asymptomatic or mild; can have non-pleuritic chest pain from mediastinal or hilar lymphadenopathy; can have rheumatic features or pericarditis | 8% develop fibrocavitary disease, associated with underlying COPD | |
Immunology | >90% positive skin test, 20% urine antigen | 75-95% antibodyes, 40% urine antigen | 60-90% urine antigen |
Culture | <25% positive | 5-70% positive (more likely if cavitary) | 50-70% positive |
Blastomycosis
- Inhalation is main portal of entry
- Incubation 3 weeks to 3 months
- In outbreaks, 50% of exposed developed symptoms
- Primarily presents with pulmonary blastomycosis with influenza-like illness, acute pneumonia, ARDS, or chronic pneumonia
- Skin is most common extrapulmonary site, but can also infect bone and prostate
- CNS infection is rare
Coccidiomycosis
- Asymptaomtic common in 60%
- Early pulmonary infection
- Mild
- Valley fever, including arthralgias and erythema nodosum
- Extrapulmonary dissemination
- More common in African Americans
Emergomycosis
- Cutaneous disease in immunocompromised patients, especially advanced HIV
- Can also cause pulmonary disease, extrapulmonary disease, or disseminated
Diagnosis
- Notify laboratory if a risk group 3 organism is suspected
- For blood cultures, the isolator system is preferred to BacTAlert
- Media
- Brain-heart infusion with sheep blood plus antibacterials is preferred
- Cycloheximide can be used to prevent growth of saprophytic molds (always with one plate without)
- Incubate at 30ºC to enhance growth of mold forms
- Incubated for 3 weeks for fungi in general, but should be extended to 4 weeks for dimorphic fungi
- Coccidioides is the fastest-growing, within 3 to 5 days on SAB, and can grow on chocolate and sheep's blood agars
Organism | Findings on Microscopy |
---|---|
Histoplasma | intracellular 2-4 μm yeast-like cells in macrophages, may have narrow-based budding |
Blastomyces | 8-15 μm yeast-like cells with broad-based budding, refractile thick cell wall, but early spherules can be confused with Coccioides |
Coccidioides | spherules are thick-walled, 10-80 μm with endospores; alternating barrel-shaped arthroconidia in mycelial form |
Marneffei | divides by binary fission |
Emergomyces | 2.5-5 μm small yeast form with narrow-based budding; septate hyphae with conidiophores at right answers, with conidia clustered in florettes of 2 to 3 conidia |
EORTC Definition2
- Proven invasive fungal disease
- Histopathology or direct microscopy of sterile material of specimens obtained from an affected site showing the distinctive form of the fungus, or
- Recovery by culture of sterile material of the fungus from specimens from an affected site, or
- Blood culture that yields the fungus
- Probable invasive fungal disease
- Requires clinical features and mycologic evidence, but host does not have to be immunocompromised for dimorphic or endemic fungi
- Host factors: not applicable
- Clinical features: evidence for geographical or occupational exposure (including remote) to the fungus and compatible clinical illness
- Mycological evidence:
- Histoplasma or Blastomyces antigen in urine, serum, or body fluid
- Antibody to Coccidioides in CSF or 2-fold rise in 2 consecutive serum samples
Prevention
Laboratory Safety
- Many are risk group 3 and need to notify lab if suspected
- Opening the plates outside of a BSC is one of the highest risk actions
References
- ^ Ashraf N, Kubat RC, Poplin V, Adenis AA, Denning DW, Wright L, McCotter O, Schwartz IS, Jackson BR, Chiller T, Bahr NC. Re-drawing the Maps for Endemic Mycoses.. Mycopathologia. 2020. doi:10.1007/s11046-020-00431-2. PMID 32040709.