Exophiala: Difference between revisions
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Exophiala
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* Causes cutaneous and subcutaneous infection most commonly |
* Causes cutaneous and subcutaneous infection most commonly |
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* Also pneumonia, brain abscess, disseminated disease (in elderly and immunosuppressed patients including AIDS and chemotherapy) |
* Also pneumonia, brain abscess, disseminated disease (in elderly and immunosuppressed patients including AIDS and chemotherapy) |
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* ''E. dermatitidis'' is neurotropic, with high mortality, and is known to colonize [[cystic fibrosis]] patients (3-20%). |
* ''[[Exophiala dermatitidis|E. dermatitidis]]'' is neurotropic, with high mortality, and is known to colonize [[cystic fibrosis]] patients (3-20%). |
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== Diagnosis == |
== Diagnosis == |
Revision as of 19:38, 2 November 2019
- The most clinically relevant "black yeast"
Clinical Presentation
- Causes cutaneous and subcutaneous infection most commonly
- Also pneumonia, brain abscess, disseminated disease (in elderly and immunosuppressed patients including AIDS and chemotherapy)
- E. dermatitidis is neurotropic, with high mortality, and is known to colonize cystic fibrosis patients (3-20%).
Diagnosis
- On histology of cutaneous infection, shows epidermal hyperkeratosis, hyperplasia, acanthosis, pseudoepitheliomatous and intraepidermal pustules
- Culture
- Colony: yeast-like, black, and mucoid
- Microscopy
- Can have pigmented fungal elements within or adjoining multinucleate giant cells
- Yeast form is budding and black, while filamentous form is septate and pigmented.
Management
- Itraconazole or oral terbinafine, alone or in combination
- Amphotericin B is also commonly used, and voriconazole also likely works