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Respiratory mycoses (reduced version). Dr Elizabeth M. Johnson, Director HPA Mycology Reference Laboratory, Bristol. Kingdom Fungi. Eucaryotic organisms No chlorophyll Absorb nourishment from living or dead organic material Filamentous form: septate or aseptate hyphae
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Respiratory mycoses(reduced version) Dr Elizabeth M. Johnson, Director HPA Mycology Reference Laboratory, Bristol
Kingdom Fungi • Eucaryotic organisms • No chlorophyll • Absorb nourishment from living or dead organic material • Filamentous form: septate or aseptate hyphae • Yeasts: unicellular fungi • Sexual and asexual forms
Inhalation of fungal spores DISEASE SPECTRUM ALLERGY Spores 8 µm SINUSITIS ASPERGILLOMA PULMONARYASPERGILLOSIS 2-4 µm DISEMINATED ASPERGILLOSIS
Schizophyllum commune • Basidiomycete often found on rotting wood • Increasingly recognised as a cause of sinusitis • Produces raised fruiting bodies on prolonged incubation • Look for clamp connections and spicules
Diagnosis of respiratory mycoses Presence of risk factors Clinical signs Laboratory Microscopy & Culture of sputum and BAL Serology - detection of antibodies and fungal antigens Detection of fungal DNA using PCR
Patchy changes seen on chest radiograph of patient with invasive aspergillosis
Aspergillosis: radiological findingsin the lungs Halo sign on CT scan - early finding (1-10 days) Crescent-shaped lesions on chest radiograph - late sign following neutrophil recovery Air crescent Halo sign
Aspergillus hyphae in a sputum sample Microscopy of a mucoraceous mould
Fungal serology - Antigens Tests for antigenaemia Asp Cryp • Latex agglutination + +++ • ELISA + +++ Aspergillus ELISARat EBA-2 monoclonal antibodydirected against galactomannansensitivity - 1 ng/ml G - testAmebocyte limulus lysate test Horse shoe crab coagulation cascadesensitivity - 1 pg/ml • TARGET • Cell wall components: • mannans • galactomannan • 1,3 beta-D-glucans • Cytoplasmic antigens • Metabolites
Pitfalls of PCR Choice of sampleBlood, Serum or PlasmaBALTissue Method of DNA extractionMechanicalChemicalEnzymes Contamination:Environmental Amplicon Absence of standardization of reagents and targets
Infection with Scedosporium spp. • Pseudallesheriosis - sexual form (teleomorph) Pseudallescheria boydii • Clinically indistinguishable from invasive aspergillosis • Specific features: • Infection often follows near-drowning accidents • Neutropenia is a risk factor • Refractory to treatment
Scedosporium apiospermum Scedosporium prolificans
Infection with Fusarium spp. • Clinically very similar to invasive aspergillosis • Specific features: • Cutaneous lesions (70%) • Blood culture often positive (50-70%) • Often water borne • Sinus infection may lead to disseminated disease
Cryptococcosis in the UK 1980 - 1999 Knight et al. 1993 J Infect 27:185-191 No. cases Year AIDS-defining 24 18 24 illness
Cryptococcus neoformans • CAN infect healthy, non-immunocompromised hosts • Today mainly associated with HIV-infected patients • AIDS-defining illness • HAART has had an impact • Mode of infection is inhalation but haematogenous dissemination leads to meningitis • Diagnosis by direct microscopy or LPA antigen test
Coccidioides immitis Cause of coccidioidomycosis Endemic areas southwestern USA, Central and South America Infection by inhalation of arthroconidia Mild transient pulmonary infection 1% develop disseminated disease
Coccidioides immitis distribution Endemic areas: southwestern USA Central and South America From: Medical Mycology Kwon-Chung and Bennett 1992 Lea & Febiger
Coccidioides immitis life cycle From: Medical Mycology Kwon-Chung and Bennett 1992 Lea & Febiger
Direct microscopy Endosporulating spherules seen on direct microscopy of pus, sputum or joint fluid Difficult to obtain in culture Culture Mycelial colonies after incubation at 25 - 30ºC for 2-7 days Growth on actidione Typical arthroconidia Exoantigen test to confirm Gene-probe also available Laboratory diagnosis of coccidioidomycosis Serology Immunodiffusion and complement fixation
Histoplasmosis • Guano-enriched soil source • Tissue form: budding yeasts • Reticuloendothelial system • Chronic cases - calcifications • Widespread geographically - especially Eastern USA, & Africa • Histoplasma var. capsulatum and var. duboisii
Laboratory diagnosis of histoplasmosis • Culture • Mycelial colonies after • incubation at 25 - 30ºC • for 2-7 days • Conversion to yeast on • blood agar or BHI agar at • 37ºC, 2-6 weeks • Direct microscopy • Small, oval, budding yeast • cells seen in Giemsa • stained smears • Cells often seen within • macrophages Serology Immunodiffusion and complement fixation
The ideal diagnostic test • Sensitive and specific • High positive predictive value • High negative predictive value • Simple, rapid and inexpensive