Title: Fungal and Protozoal Diseases
1 Fungal and Protozoal Diseases
2Candidiasis
- 30-50 of people may carry the organism with no
evidence of infection - Clinical evidence of infection depends on three
factors - 1) immune status of host
- 2) oral mucosa environment
- 3) strain of Candida albicans
- Oral candidiasis may develop in people who are
otherwise healthy
3Candidiasis
- Pseudomembranous Candidiasis (thrush)
- Adherent white plaques (resembling cottage
cheese) on tongue, palate, buccal mucosa - Plaques can be removed by scraping
- Burning sensation, bad taste
- May be initiated by exposure to broad spectrum
antibiotics (rapid development) - Longstanding form result of immunosuppression
(leukemia, HIV infection)
4 Pseudomembranous Candidiasis
5 Erythematous Candidiasis
- Several presentations
- Acute atrophic candidiasis (antibiotic sore
mouth) -
- Central papillary atrophy (median rhomboid
glossitis) -
- Chronic multifocal candidiasis
- Angular cheilitis (involvement of angles of
mouth) - Denture stomatitis (erythema localized to
denture-bearing areas removable dental prosthesis)
6 Erythematous Candidiasis
7 Chronic Hyperplastic Candidiasis
- Candidal leukoplakia
- White patch cannot be removed by scraping
- Mucocutaneous candidiasis
- Severe oral candidiasis as component of
immunologic disorder
8 Chronic Hyperplastic Candidiasis
9 Candidiasis
Angular cheilitis
?
Mixed infection candida/herpes
Central papillary atrophy of the tongue
Candidal cheilitis
10Histoplasmosis
- Most common systemic fungal infection in U.S.
- Most individuals who become exposed have no
symptoms, or only a mild, flu-like illness for
1-2 weeks - Acute histoplasmosis is a self-limiting pulmonary
infection that develops in 1 of people exposed.
Fever, headache, myalgia, nonproductive cough,
anorexia
11Histoplasmosis
- Chronic histoplasmosis usually affects elderly,
emphysematous white males or immunosuppressed
patients. Clinically similar to tuberculosis. - Disseminated histoplasmosis results from the
progressive spread of infection to extrapulmonary
sites. Usually occurs in elderly, debilitated,
or immunosuppressed patients. Very serious,
results in death of 90 untreated patients.
12Histoplasmosis
- Most oral lesions of histoplasmosis occur with
the disseminated form of the disease. - Solitary, painful ulceration of tongue, palate,
or buccal mucosa. - Lesion has firm, rolled margins, may be
clinically indistinguishable from malignancy.
13Histoplasmosis
14Oral Histoplasmosis
15 Blastomycosis
- Acquired by inhalation of spores which grow as
yeast in alveoli of lungs. Infection is halted
in lungs in most patients. - Acute blastomycosis resembles pneumonia most
patients do not require treatment - Chronic blastomycosis is more common than acute
form resembles tuberculosis - Cutaneous lesions begin as erythematous nodules
that enlarge and ulcerate
16 Blastomycosis
17Paracoccidioidomycosis(South American
Blastomycosis)
- Deep fungal infection seen mostly in South
America - Pulmonary infection, sometimes spreads to other
tissues - Mulberry-like ulcerations most commonly affect
the alveolar mucosa, gingiva, palate, lip, and
buccal mucosa, often more than one oral site
18Paracoccidioidomycosis(South American
Blastomycosis)
19Coccidioidomycosis(San Joaquin Valley Fever
Valley Fever)
- Usually asymptomatic or mild flu-like symptoms
- Occasionally, hypersensitivity reaction causes
development of erythema multiforme or erythema
nodosum - Chronic progressive pulmonary coccidioidomycosis
is rare and resembles tuberculosis
20Coccidioidomycosis (San Joaquin Valley Fever
Valley Fever)
- Disseminated coccidioidomycosis
- Organism spreads to extrapulmonary sites.
- Immunosuppression increases risk of
dissemination. - Cutaneous lesions often develop in area of
central face, especially nasolabial fold
21Coccidioidomycosis (San Joaquin Valley Fever
Valley Fever)
22Cryptococcosis
- 5-8 AIDS patients acquire this infection
- Most common life-threatening fungal infection in
AIDS patients - Most patients have significant underlying medical
problem related to immune suppression - Dissemination common (meninges, skin, bone,
prostate)
23Cryptococcosis
- Cryptococcal meningitis characterized by
headache, fever, vomiting, stiff neck - Cutaneous lesions (often involving head and neck)
develop in 10-20 of patients with
disseminateddisease. - Erythematous papules or pustules that may
ulcerate. - Treatment may be difficult due to underlying
medical problem
24Zygomycosis(Mucormycosis Phycomycosis)
- Found in insulin-dependent diabetics with poor
control also immunosuppressed patients - Rhinocerebral zygomycosis
- Nasal obstruction, bloody discharge, headache,
swelling, cellulitis, facial paralysis. - Maxillary sinus involvement may present as
intraoral swelling of maxillary alveolar process
or palate -
- Palatal ulceration may evolve with significant
tissue destruction - Sinus may appear opaque on radiographs
25Zygomycosis(Mucormycosis Phycomycosis)
26Zygomycosis(Mucormycosis Phycomycosis)
27Aspergillosis
- May present as allergy, localized infection of
damaged tissue, or invasive infection in
immunocompromised patient - May develop following tooth extraction or
endodontic treatment - Localized pain, nasal discharge, may lead to
necrotic palatal perforation in immunocompromised
patient) - Disseminated aspergillus occurs primarily in
immunosuppressed patients
28Aspergillosis
29Toxoplasmosis
- Organism found in cat feces (pregnant women
should avoid situations that place them at risk -
e.g., changing the litter box) - In immunocompetent person, infection symptomatic
or mild, typically no treatment required - May be devastating for immunocompromised patient
or developing fetus
30Toxoplasmosis
- In immunosuppressed patient, may represent new
infection or reactivation of previously encysted
organisms. - Principal groups at risk are AIDS patients,
transplant recipients, and cancer patients - Infection can cause necrotizing encephalitis,
pneumonia, and myositis or myocarditis, CNS
involvement
31Toxoplasmosis
- Congenital toxoplasmosis
- Non-immune mother contracts disease during
pregnancy - Organism crosses placental barrier and infects
developing fetus - Most healthy adults require no treatment
- Treatment often prevents transmission to the fetus