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Mycobacteria and Medically Important Fungi

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Title: Mycobacteria and Medically Important Fungi


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Mycobacteria and Medically Important Fungi
  • Louise S. Thai, M.D.

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? Mycobacterium tuberculosis
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Morphologic and Cultural Characteristics
  • Slim, acid-fast rods
  • Extremely slow growing
  • Media Loewenstein-Jensen
  • Cording on 7H-11
  • Niacin production
  • Resistant to disinfectants, except formaldehyde
    and glutaraldehyde
  • Heat and UV sensitive

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Epidemiology
  • 1/2 of the world population is infected and 30
    million people have active TB
  • 8 million new cases per year and 3 million deaths
    due to TB yearly
  • 1 infectious cause of death worldwide 6 of all
    deaths and 26 of avoidable adult deaths
  • Susceptibility ?Native Americans Eskimos
  • ?Caucasians ?Elderly immunocompromised
  • Transmission via aerosols less contagious than
    most viral respiratory infections
  • Morbidity Mortality in the U.S. steady ?
  • 2002 15,075 cases

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TB Incidence in the U.S.
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Virulence Factors Cord factor
? Toxic to mice
? ?Granuloma formation
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Pathogenesis
  • Rapid phagocytosis
  • Prevention of phagolysosomal acidification
  • pH in phagolysosome remains neutral despite the
    fusion of phagosome and lysosome
  • Death of the alveolar macrophages

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Immune Response
  • IL-2 and IFN-? produced by Th1 cells activate
    macrophages
  • Activated macrophages kill ingested mycobacteria
  • Killing by CD8 cells is mediated by IFN-?
  • If ??? mycobacteria ????PMN, T-cells
    macrophages ? granuloma
  • Macrophage lysosomal enzymes ? tissue damage
  • TNF? ? caseous necrosis ? liquefied necrosis ?
    spread to other sites

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Clinical Aspects
  • Asymptomatic infection when infected as adult
  • Primary TB
  • Develops after an initial exposure
  • Usually in children lt4 years of age
  • Is not infectious
  • Secondary TB
  • Is a result of reactivation of dormant infection
  • Usually in adults
  • Is infectious
  • Miliary TB

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Diagnosis
  • Skin test (PPD) 5 units of PPD are injected
    intradermally
  • Positive RX induration of ?10 mm in diameter
    erythema
  • Lab Diagnosis
  • Direct smears stained by Ziehl-Neelsen
  • Radiometric culture in 7H-11 medium with
    14C-palmitic acid ? 14CO2
  • Gas chromatography of fatty acids.
  • PCR

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Mycobacterium leprae
  • Has not been cultured in laboratory
  • Grown in mouse footpads and armadillos
  • Tissue tropism skin and nerves

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Epidemiology
  • Transmission
  • Requires prolonged intimate contact
  • ??? in nasal secretions
  • ??? in the skin lesions
  • Worldwide 12 million cases
  • U.S. 96 cases in 2002
  • lt 10 Native Americans
  • The rest Immigrants

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Pathogenesis
  • Intracellular Replication
  • Two Clinical Forms
  • Tuberculoid Low of AFBs, Lepromin
  • Lepromatous High of AFBs, Lepromin -

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Clinical Aspects
  • Incubation Period YEARS
  • Tuberculoid
  • Hypopigmented skin lesions
  • Thickened nerves
  • Anesthesia
  • Lepromatous
  • Multiple nodular lesions ? lion-like face
  • Disfiguration

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Diagnosis and Treatment
  • AFBs in skin scrapings
  • Triple drug regimen
  • Dapsone
  • Clofazimine
  • Rifampin

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Leprosy patient Before and After
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Medically Important Fungi
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General Characteristics
  • Two Types Yeasts and Molds
  • Yeasts single cells, reproduce by asexual
    budding or fission
  • Molds produce long filaments (hyphae) and can
    reproduce sexually by mating and forming spores
  • Most fungi of medical importance grow asexually
    by producing conidia (spores). Shape, color
    arrangement of conidia are the basis for ID.

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Pathogenesis
  • No endotoxin in the cell wall
  • Toxins
  • LSD (lysergic acid diethylamide) produced by
    Claviceps purpura
  • aflatoxin, a carcinogen produced by Aspergillus
    flavus
  • Granuloma formation
  • Fungal antigens ? cell-mediated immune system ?
    delayed type hypersensitivity RX

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Cryptococcus neoformans
  • Causes systemic mycosis
  • Lung infection
  • Meningitis in AIDS patients
  • Encapsulated yeasts
  • Capsular staining with India ink

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Dimorphic Fungi
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Candida albicans
  • Opportunistic
  • Causes
  • oral thrush
  • diaper rash
  • vaginosis
  • nosocomial infections

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Diagnosis
  • Budding yeasts and pseudohyphae in tissues
  • Yeasts when cultured on blood agar, Sabouraud
    agar etc.
  • Gram
  • Germ tubes when incubated in serum- supplemented
    medium _at_ 37? C

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Candida albicans(Dimorphic)
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Coccidioides immitis(Dimorphic)
  • Causes systemic mycosis
  • Lung infection (fever, cough, chest pain)
  • Disseminated coccidioidomycosis
  • Spherules in tissue specimens
  • Hyphae with arthrospores on Sabouraud agar _at_ 25?C
  • Skin test

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Histoplasma capsulatum (Dimorphic)
  • Causes systemic mycosis
  • Pneumonia
  • Disseminated histoplasmosis
  • Oval budding yeasts inside the macrophages
  • Hyphae with tuberculate macroconidia when
    cultured on Sabouraud agar
  • Serology (e.g., immunodiffusion test)
  • Skin test with histoplasmin

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Aspergillus fumigatus
  • Opportunistic
  • Causes
  • Lung aspergillosis
  • Systemic aspergillosis
  • Septate branching hyphae
  • Conidia (asexual spores)

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Dermatophytes
  • Causes diseases of the skin and its appendages
  • Direct microscopic examination of KOH preparation
    of the skin and nail scrapings
  • Typical hyphae and conidia when cultured on
    Sabouraud agar at 25? C

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Antifungal Treatment
  • Fluconazole
  • Ketoconazole
  • Severe cases of systemic mycoses
  • Amphotericin B
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