Lecture 25 Flashcards

1
Q

What are the two excessively simplified groups that fungi can be typed into?

A

Yeasts which are round or oval and reproduce via budding

Moulds which have tubular hyphae and reproduce via spores

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2
Q

What are the two types of pathogenic yeasts?

A

Candida Albicans which is the typical cause of almost all fungal disease and cryptococcus neoformans which very rarely causes disease and is encased in a sugar capsule

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3
Q

What are the three pathogenic moulds?

A

Dermatophytes that is the most common cause of mould diseases
Aspergillus species which only very rarely cause disease in patients with a very low neutrophil count
Zygomycetes

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4
Q

Where is candida albicans typically found and how does it induce disease?

A

It is a commensal of the mouth, gut and vagina however overgrowth which can occur due to suppression of the immune system or its neighboring non-pathogenic bacteria

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5
Q

How does canidida albicans appear in labs?

A

Black yeasts with pseudohyphae in the gram stain
Will appear as larger than bacteria
Grows well on blood agar

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6
Q

What are the 4 different conditions that can occur as a result of candida albicans overgrowth?

A
Overgrowth typicaly occurs in warm moist areas
Pharyngitis via growth in the oesophagus
Vaginitis via growth in the vagina
Intertrigo via growth in the armpit
Candid vulvovaginitis or nappy rash
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7
Q

Is overgrowth of candida albicans invasive?

A

No as it does not invade into tissues of the blood

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8
Q

How is overgrowth of candida albicans treated?

A

Typically topical through
nystatin suspension or pastiles,
amphotericin B pastilles,
azole pessaries or cream (for vaginal infections)

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9
Q

What are the two types of cryptococcus neoformans?

A

C.neoformans var neoformans which is associated with pigeon faeces
C.neoformans var gatti
associated with eucalyptus trees

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10
Q

What type of disease is caused by c.neoformans?

A

Typically an asymptomatic pulmonary infection, although in severly immunocompromised patients disease can progress to meningitis

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11
Q

How is meningitis caused by c.neoformans detected and then treated?

A

DIagnosis by detection of antigen, microscopy or culture

Treatment is via amphotericin B IV or oral fluconazole

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12
Q

What type of disease do dermatophytes cause?

A

Tinea or ringworm which is never invasive

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13
Q

What are the three dermatophytes which cause tinea?

A

Microsporum species
Trichophyton species
Epidermophyton species

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14
Q

How can tinea supppurans appear to cause baldness?

A

Mould growth occurs in hair follicle, which odes not kill th hair but makes it very brittle so it easily breaks off

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15
Q

What is onchomycosis?

A

Tinea of the nailbed

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16
Q

How are dermatophyte infections treated?

A

A topical azole is used for most infections

Although nails require an oral azole to be used as the infection site is inaccessible

17
Q

What are two common skin infections caused by dermatophytes not including tinea?

A

Pityriasis versicolor caused by malassezia furfur, this appears as hypopigmented macules on the trunk and is treated with azoles
Seborrheic dermatitis caused by pityrosporum species which cause a greasy facial rash and dandruff these are also treated with topical azole

18
Q

What is aspergillus fumigatus?

A

A spore bearing branched mould typically found in rotting vegetation
This is a disease which only causes disease in those who are neutropenic
Can also cause allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis

19
Q

What is neutropenic?

A

A deficiency of neutrophils

20
Q

What is allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis?

A

Damage to the lungs allows build up of mucus which allows growth of aspergillus fumigatus

21
Q

What occurs with aspergillus fumigatus?

A

Cavitating pneumonia

22
Q

How is aspergillus fumigatus diagnosed?

A

Microscopy and culture

23
Q

How is aspergillus fumigatus treated?

A

Amphotericin B IV for weeks
Liposomal amphotericin B
Voriconazole and other azoles
Surgery

24
Q

How does amphotericin B function as an antifungal drug?

A

Binds to ergosterol which is not found in humans allowing disruption of targeted cytoplasmic membranes
Its infusion is rleated with anaphylatic reactions
has nephrotoxicity due to K+ loss
lipid versions (liposomal) are less topic

25
Q

What is the IV dosage of amphotericin B?

A

0.5-1g/Kg

26
Q

How do azoles function as an antifungal drug?

A

Inhibition of ergosterol synthesis

Typically given through IV and is a relatively non toxic antifungal drug