Endemic fungal infections: Histoplasmosis, (Para)Coccidioidomycosis, Blasto (mechanism of disease)

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  • Опубліковано 19 чер 2023
  • This is a flowchart on the endemic fungal infections, including histoplasmosis, coccidioidomycosis, paracoccidioidomycosis, and blastomycosis, covering the etiology, pathophysiology, and manifestations.
    ADDITIONAL TAGS:
    Risk factors / SDOH
    Cell / tissue damage
    Structural factors
    Medicine / iatrogenic
    Infectious / microbial
    Biochem / metabolic
    Immunology / inflammation
    Signs / symptoms
    Tests / imaging / labs
    Environmental / exposure
    Hereditary / genetic
    Smooth muscle physiology
    Pathophysiology
    Etiology
    Manifestations
    Endemic fungal infections
    Pneumonia and disseminated systemic infection with …
    Histoplasma capsulatum: Histoplasmosis
    Coccidioides immitis,
    Coccidioides posadasii:
    Coccidioidomycosis
    (valley fever)
    Paracoccidioides brasiliensis,
    Paracoccidioides lutzii:
    Paracoccidioidomycosis
    Blastomyces dermatitidis:
    Blastomycosis
    Living/travel in endemic areas: Mississippi and the Ohio river valley
    Exposure to bird / bat droppings in endemic areas via activities like spelunking, cave exploration
    Immunosuppression (AIDS, medication, hereditary, etc)
    Living/travel in endemic areas: California, Southwestern USA
    Soil/dust exposure (e.g., during windstorms, earthquakes, archeological explorations)
    Living/travel in endemic areas: South and Central America
    ♂ ♀ (15-fold difference)
    Living/travel in endemic areas: Southeastern, Central, Eastern, and the Great Lakes region of USA
    Map from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
    Asymptomatic
    Flu-like illness: fever, weight loss, erythema nodosum, hepatosplenomegaly, lymphadenopathy, nonproductive cough
    Ulcerative oral lesion (palatal, tongue ulcers)
    CXR: diffuse nodular densities, focal infiltrate or cavity, or LAD
    Best initial test: positive urine and serum polysaccharide antigen test
    Silver stain of biopsy or bronchoalveolar lavage showing
    Macrophages filled with yeast cells that measure 1-5 μm, size RBC
    Flu-like illness or pneumonia: fever, cough, night sweats, anorexia, chest pain, and dyspnea
    CNS: meningitis
    CXR: normal or infiltrates/lymphadenopathy/pleural effusion
    Sputum, wound exudate, joint effusion → KOH, silver stain, or culture showing: large spherules containing endospores, size RBC
    Skin: erythema nodosum (desert bumps)
    Joints: arthralgia (desert rheumatism)
    Bone: multiple osteolytic lesions
    Asymptomatic
    Painful nasal, pharyngeal, and laryngeal mucosal ulcerations
    Smear (with KOH/calcofluor stain) or tissue biopsy (with silver/PAS stain): budding yeast with “captain's wheel” formation, size RBC
    Lymphadenopathy (usually cervical)
    Can disseminate → extrapulmonary manifestations; looks like →
    Pneumonia: cough, dyspnea, tachycardia, fever
    Sputum, urine, or body fluids → KOH first, then confirmatory culture: yeast form (at = 37°C), broad-based buds, size = RBC
    Skin: verrucous lesions and granulomatous nodules (looks like SCC)
    Bone: osteolytic lesions (in the ribs, vertebrae, and long bones)
    Genitourinary involvement: prostatitis, orchitis, epididymitis
    CNS lesions: meningitis, epidural/intracranial abscesses

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