02/27g Introduction to Mycology Flashcards

1
Q

What are fungi? List five characteristics, especially things that distinguish them from animals and plants

A

1) Eukaryotic
2) Non-photosynthetic (require a carbon source)
3) Have a cell wall
4) Cell membranes contains ergosterol
5) Often grow as yeasts (round) or moulds (filamentous)

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2
Q

List the seven most common pathogenic fungal genera

A

1) Candidia
2) Aspergillus
3) Cryptococcus
4) Blastomyces
5) Histoplasma
6) Coccidioides
7) Dermatophytes

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3
Q

What has there been an increased overall incidence of fungal infection?

A

More immunosuppressed and “at risk” patients (HIV, steroids, transplants, ICU patients)
Travel

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4
Q

What are the four medical problems caused by fungi?

A

1) Allergic disease
2) Mushroom poisoning (such as amanita)
3) Mycotoxin - poisoning by secondary metabolites
4) Mycoses

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5
Q

What are mycoses?

A

Infection and resulting disease caused by fungi

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6
Q

What four types of fungi cause mycoses?

A

Yeasts
Moulds
Thermally dimorphic fungi
Dermatophytes

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7
Q

What is the most common disease-causing yeast?

A

Candida albicans

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8
Q

What two fungi are common colonizers of humans?

A

C. albicans

Dermatophytes

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9
Q

What is mucosal candidiasis?

A

Locally invasive disease caused by C. albicans
Infects oral and vaginal mucosa in immunocompetent patients
Infects oral and esophageal mucosa in immunocompromised patients

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10
Q

What are three manifestations of systemic candidiasis?

A
Candidemia (from IV catheters)
Intra-abdominal (abdominal surgery)
Disseminated disease (immunocompromised patients)
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11
Q

What are three other Candida species that commonly cause infections, particularly in hospitals?

A

C. glabrata
C. krusei
C. parapsilosis

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12
Q

What is Cryptococcosis?

A

An opportunistic infection by Cryptococcus neoformans
Causes a primary pulmonary infection with CNS tropism
Most pulmonary infections are self-limiting, but CNS disease is fatal if untreated

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13
Q

How is Cryptococcosis diagnosed?

A

Culture
Lumbar puncture
Antigen tests for capsular polysaccharide

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14
Q

Where in the environment is Cryptococcus neoformans often found?

A

Bird excreta
Decaying vegetation
Free-living amoebae

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15
Q

What are the two forms of infectious moulds?

A

Septate

Aseptate (Zygomycetes)

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16
Q

What are the two types of infectious septate moulds?

A

Non-pigmented/hyaline

Pigmented/dematiaceous

17
Q

What are four genera of hyaline moulds?

A

Aspergillus
Fusarium
Scedosporium-Pseudallescheria
Paecilomyces

18
Q

What is the most common Aspergillus species that causes human disease?

A

A. fumigatus

19
Q

What are two diagnostic morphological features of Aspergillus?

A

Uniform hyphal diameter

Regular, frequent septa

20
Q

In which patient population is Aspergillosis a major concern?

A

Very immunosuppressed patients, particularly those who are neutropenic

21
Q

How does Aspergillus enter the body? Where does it cause disease?

A

Entry via the respiratory tract

Disseminates to all organs and the CNS

22
Q

How is Aspergillosis diagnosed? List three ways

A

Chest X-ray
Histopathology
Galactomannan detection

23
Q

How is Aspergillosis treated?

A

Empiric antifungals

Pre-emptive monitoring is the most effective way to prevent infection

24
Q

What are four types of diseases that are caused by dematiaceous fungi? Name examples

A

Superficial - tinea nigra, black piedra
Cutaneous and corneal - mycotic keratitis, onychomycosis
Subcutaneous - by traumatic inoculation
Systemic - infects lungs in immunocompromised patients and spreads to other organs, particularly the CNS

25
Q

What are Zygomycetes? What do they look like?

A

Bread moulds

Have no septa and filaments have variable diameters

26
Q

What are the two most common disease-causing genera of Zygomycetes?

A

Mucor

Rhizopus

27
Q

With what three conditions is it common to see Mucormycosis?

A

Hematologic malignancy
Diabetic ketoacidosis
Iron overload syndromes

28
Q

What are the clinical manifestations of Mucormycosis?

A

Rhinocerebral
Pulmonary
Disseminated

29
Q

How is Mucormycosis treated?

A

Surgical excision - very important to do
High dose antifungals
Reconstitute immune system

30
Q

What are three species of thermally dimorphic fungi that are common to the US? In what geographical regions are they found?

A

Histoplasma capsulatum - central US (Ohio and Mississippi River valleys)
Blastomyces dermatitidis - central and eastern US, especially the Great Lakes region
Coccidioides immits - arid desert regions of the southwest US and Latin America

31
Q

What does it mean if a fungi is “thermally dimorphic”?

A

It exists in the environment as a mould, and in humans as a round/yeast-like form
Morphological transition between the two forms depends on temperature

32
Q

How are thermally dimorphic fungi usually gain access to human hosts?

A

Inhalation from the environment

33
Q

What diseases are caused by Dermatophytes?

A

Superficial infections of keratinized tissues (skin, hair, nails, feathers)

34
Q

What is the common name for tinea pedis?

A

Athlete’s foot