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Aspergillosis infection

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Presentation on theme: "Aspergillosis infection"— Presentation transcript:

1 Aspergillosis infection
This is any infection caused by Aspergillus –affecting compromised individuals The systemic forms of this infection are opportunistic infections In few occasions it is non opportunistic The clinical manifestations vary from allergy to skin to systemic forms Clinical types 1. Allergic aspergillosis Asthma Allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis (ABPA) IgE antibodies present. In ABPA also 1gG

2 2. Colonizing aspergillosis (ASpergilloma=Aspergillus fungus ball
Pulmonary aspergilloma diagnoses include: cough , hemoptysis, variable fever CXR will show coin-like mass in the lung There will be a radiolucent crescent (monod,s sign=grelot) over the mass 3. Invasive aspergillosis-pulmonary Sings: cough, hemoptysis, fever, Penomonia, leukocytosis Lab investigation (direct microscopy and culture) may be negative especially if specimen is noninvasive like sputum 5. Aspergillus sinusitis Nasal polyps-sinusitis-eye-cranium (rhinocerebral) The most common cause is Aspergillus flavas (also other fungi can cause sinusitis)

3 5. Eye infection,, corneal ulcer-endopthalamitis
6. Ear infection,,otitis externa-otitis media 7. Nail and skin infection 8. Toxicosis due to ingestion of aflatoxin 9. Disseminated form-rare, in debilitated patients Etiology Any species of Aspergillus. It is a moniliaceous Imperfect mold Ubiquitous distribution It has hyaline septat hyphae, conidiospres with chains of unicellular conidia The common species are Aspergillus fumigatus, A.flavas, A. niger, A. terreus and others The perfect stage is Eurotium species an Ascomycete fungus

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5 Laboratory diagnosis Specimens: Respiratory specimens (sputum, bronchoscope, lung biopsy), surgical removed Aspergilloma, mass, scrapings, blood, etc Lab. Investigation: direct microscopy-culture-serology Direct microscopy KOH, Giemsa, Grecott methenamine silver stain (GMS), Periodic acid Schiff (PAS); will show septate hyphae with dichotomous branching Culture on SDA (no cycloheximide) fast growing-if non-sterile specimen (e.g. sputum) rule out contaminant possibility by repeat specimen

6 Serology: primarily test for antibody using Aspergillus polyvalent Ag, A. terreus, A. ndulans Ag
Using ID or CIE, SP-RIA (solid phase radioimmunoassay) more sensitive Multi-band identity lines will be seen in aspergilloma ELISA test for antigen is being developed There is latex agglutination test available-not specific management SURGICAL+MEDICAL-OR MEDICAL ONLY DRUGS USED: AMPHOTERICIN B, LIPOSOMAL AMPHO B Itraconazole Voriconazole, caspofungin

7 Pneumocystosis Opportunistic fungal pneumonia It is interstitial pneumonia of the alveolar area Signs include; dyspnea, cyanosis Affect compromised host Especially common in AI DS patients Infection commonly known as PCP

8 Pneumocystic carinii Etiology Previously thought to be a protozoan parasite It has been proven to be a fungus based on RNA studies similar to fungi Chitinase enzyme attack the cell wall of the cyst so it has chitin like fungi Does not grow in media like SDA, others Naturally found in rodents (rats), other animals (goats, horses), humans contract it during childhood

9 Laboratory diagnosis Patient specimens Sputum Lung biopsy tissue Histological section or smears stained by silver stain (GMS) If + there will be cyst of hat shape cup shape crescent, parentheses, comma Can be detected by specific antibodies Treatment: trimethoprim-sulfammethoxazole (septrin)


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