Mycology Flashcards

1
Q

3 morphological groups of fungi?

A
  • yeasts (single celled)
  • filamentous funghu
  • dimorphous funghi (yeasts/filamentous)
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2
Q

How do funghi reproduce?

A
  • vegetative growth
  • spore production
    > spores are stable if dry but killed by disinfectants and boiling
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3
Q

What are arthrospores?

A
  • disartculation of septate hyphae into separate cells
  • vegetative spores
  • frequently produced by dermatophytes in skin and hair
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4
Q

What are conidiospores?

A
  • asexual spores
  • formed externally by abstriction of a conidiophore/directly from mycelium/prudced within specialised fructification
  • may be uni or multicellular
  • IN CULTURE ONLY dermatophytes produce 2 types conidia (no. cells and size= micro/macroconidia)
    > in hairy skin dermatophytes exist only as hyphae or arthroconidia
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5
Q

What are sexual spores useful for?

A
  • identifying class of fungus (4 classes)
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6
Q

What 3 ways may fungus cause disease?

A
  • Mycoses (growing and invading tissues)
  • Mycotoxicoses (producing toxigenic substances)
  • Allergy (produce substances that sensitise host)
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7
Q

What funghi are capable of causing damage via mycoses?

A
> 1* eg. 
- deramtophytes
- histoplasma
- coccidiodes
> 2* opportunistic eg. 
- candida 
- aspergillus
- zygomycetes
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8
Q

How are mycotic lesions further subdivided?

A
  • superficial/cutaneous (eg. ringworm, pathogenesis = bacterial/viral disease with short incubation period, sudden onset and spontaneous healing)
  • subcutaneous (eg. sporotrichosis) and systemic (internal organs affected eg. aspergillosis) resemble aberrant bacterial disease eg. TB with protracted incubation period, insidious onset of symptoms, may be fatal
    > endogenous or exogenous
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9
Q

Are fungal infections contagious?

A

> Not normally - parasitic state is of littel significance to fungal lifecycle
- each case usually is picked up individually from environment
conidiospores may spread through the air

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10
Q

How can mycoses cause damage in the host?

A
  • penetration of tissues
  • pressure on adjacnet tissues
  • thrombi (zygomycetes predilection for BVs)
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11
Q

Which yeasts can cause mycosis?

A

> cryptococcus neoformans

  • spherical yeast
  • polysacharide capsule
  • main source = pigeon droppings full of creatinine
  • infects via resp or penetration
  • acute/sub/chronic infection
  • exogenous
  • no clearly defined clinical pattern
  • resp/CNS/systemic disease (can cause meningitis)
  • cattle: mastitis
  • horses: myxoma like lesions
  • dogs and cats: oral/pulmonary/cutaneous lesions
  • cats: resp tract + proliferative nasal lesions esp. tip of nose
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12
Q

Which pathogen causes thrush? What type of fungus is this? Common in animals?

A

Candida albicans
- endogenous mainly
- other candida ay be exogenous
> rare in animals cf. humans

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13
Q

What type of fungus is malassezia?

A
  • lipophilic
  • normal skin and mucosa commensal
  • opportunistic pathogen of dogs
    > otitis externa
    > dermatitis
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