Fungal Infections 27.11.23 Flashcards

1
Q

Are fungi eukaryotic or prokaryotic?

A

Eukaryotic

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2
Q

What is fungi cell walls made of?

A

Chitinous cell wall

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3
Q

Is fungi heterotrophic (an organism that eats other plants or animals for energy and nutrients)?

A

Yes

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4
Q

How does fungi move?

A

Move by means of growth or through the generation of spores, which are carried through air or water

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5
Q

Define yeast

A

Yeasts are small single celled organisms that divide by budding

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6
Q

What do moulds form?

A

Moulds form multicellular hyphae and spores

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7
Q

Can fungi exist as both yeast and moulds swithcing when conditions suits? If so, what is it called?

A

Yes - called dimorphic fungi

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8
Q

What % of fungal species are yeast?

A

<1% but include several highly medically relevant ones

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9
Q

What is the aim of anti microbial drug therapy?

A

to achieve inhibitory levels of agent at the site of infection without host cell toxicity

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10
Q

How is selective toxicity relevant to treating fungal disease?

A

Anti microbial drug therapy relies upon identifying molecules with selective toxicity for organism targets—> this means exploiting the differences between fungi and human cells in order to treat the fungi rather than damaging our cells

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11
Q

Slides 8+9

A
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12
Q

What factors of fungi makes it particularly difficult to treat compared to bacteria?

A

The fact that fungi are eukaryotic

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13
Q

In what population can severe disease be caused by a small number of fungi

A

Immunocompromised

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14
Q

What is mucosal candidiasis

A

Mucosal surfaces affected by growth of candida

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15
Q

How is mucosal candidiasis treated?

A

Topical or oral azoles

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16
Q

What is invasive candidiasis mostly likely due to?

A

Invasive candidiasis is mostly due to infection of prosthetic devices or intra-abdominal disease

17
Q

What does cryptococcus cause and in what population?

A

Cryptococcus causes acute or chronic meningitis in patients with reduced cell mediated immunity

18
Q

What are the infectious and non-infectious differential diagnoses of acute/chronic meningitis?

A

Infective -

Tuberculosis
Cryptococcus
Dimorphic fungi – Histoplasma, Coccidioides, Blastomyces
Lyme
Brucella
Syphilis

Non-infective -

Sarcoidosis
Behçets’s
SLE
Malignant
Drug induced

19
Q

What is invasive aspergillosis normally associated with what populations?

A

Invasive aspergillosis is normally associated with profound immunocompromise but is increasingly recognised in patients with severe viral infection

20
Q

What does pneumocystis jirovecii cause and in what population?

A

Pneumocystis jirovecii causes a pneumonitis with severe hypoxia in the immunocompromised