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Nosocomial Fungi

The document discusses nosocomial fungi and their pathophysiology. It notes that common settings for fungal infections include the NICU, cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy or bone marrow transplants, and those with HIV/AIDS or intravascular catheters. Candida species are the most frequent cause of infection and occur in patients with breaches in epithelial barriers, changes in intestinal flora from antibiotics, hyperglycemia, or immunocompromise. Aspergillus, Mucormycosis, and other opportunistic fungi can also cause infection, especially in neutropenic patients. Diagnosis involves culture and microscopy of samples, and treatment depends on the infecting organism and severity of infection or immunosuppression.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
113 views

Nosocomial Fungi

The document discusses nosocomial fungi and their pathophysiology. It notes that common settings for fungal infections include the NICU, cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy or bone marrow transplants, and those with HIV/AIDS or intravascular catheters. Candida species are the most frequent cause of infection and occur in patients with breaches in epithelial barriers, changes in intestinal flora from antibiotics, hyperglycemia, or immunocompromise. Aspergillus, Mucormycosis, and other opportunistic fungi can also cause infection, especially in neutropenic patients. Diagnosis involves culture and microscopy of samples, and treatment depends on the infecting organism and severity of infection or immunosuppression.

Uploaded by

api-3712326
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Nosocomial Fungi

I. Pathophysiology

A. Common Settings for Nosocomial Fungal Infections

1. Neonatal intensive care unit

2. Neutropenic cancer patients

3. Bone marrow transplant patients

4. HIV infection

5. Intravascular catheters

6. Other predisposing conditions

a. Hyperalimentation

b. Hyperglycemia

c. Intralipids

d. Steroids

e. Prolonged antibiotic therapy

f. Breach of epithelial barrier

B. Infections with Candida Species

1. Predisposing conditions

a. Change in intestinal flora

(1) Prolonged antibiotic therapy

(2) Oral contraceptives

b. Breach of Epithelial Barrier

(1) Catheters - intravascular, intraperitoneal, urinary

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(2) Burns

(3) Surgery

c. Hyperglycemia

(1) Diabetes

(2) Steroids

(3) Hyperalimentation

d. Immunocompromise

(1) Prematurity

(2) Chemotherapy

(3) Neutropenia

e. Genetic Defects of Neutrophil Function

(1) Chronic granulomatous disease

(2) Myeloperoxidase deficiency

2. Order of Frequency

a. C albicans

b. C tropicalis - catheters c. C. parapsilosis - NICU

c. C krusei- Bone marrow transplant patients on fluconazole

prophylaxis

d. C glabrata, lusitaneii, guillermondii

3. Associated Physical Findings

a. Rash - isolated subcutaneous nodules

b. Eyes - endophthalmitis

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c. Liver and spleen

d. Kidneys

e. Bones

f. Rarely meningitis, especially in neonates

g. Pneumonia extremely rare

4. Microbiology

a. Fungal isolator

b. Induction of germ tubes in 20% serum - C. albicans

c. Fungal sensitivities - test Amphotericin B, fluconazole, 5-FC

5. Anti-fungal therapy - choice must be tied to gravity of infection and

degree of immunocompromise a. local infection

a. Stoma site: Clotrimazole powder

b. Vaginitis: Clotrimazole trochees or ointment

6. Locally Invasive Disease

a. Esophagitis:

(1) Amphotericin B, 0.3 mg/kg/day

(2) Fluconazole if sensitive

b. Peritonitis 2E dialysis catheter

c. Cystitis in catheterized patient - irrigation with 50 mg/L

7. Systemic Disease

a. Amphotericin B at 1.0 mg/kg

b. Remove catheter

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c. Ascertain degree of dissemination: ophthalmologic exam,

liver/spleen renal ultrasound

C. Aspergillus

1. Pre-disposing conditions

a. Bone marrow transplant

b. Prolonged neutropenia

c. Asthma for allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis

d. Cavitary lung disease for aspergilloma

2. Species Encountered

a. Aspergillus niger

b. Aspergillus flavus

c. Aspergillus terreus

3. Associated Physical Findings

a. Black eschar on exam of nares

b. Black eschar at skin site

c. Tachypnea and dyspnea

4. Diagnostic Issues

a. Requires >7 days to grow b. biopsy most rapid means of

diagnosis - look for septate hyphae c. CT of chest more

sensitive for nodular infiltrates than CXR d. sinus films and

ENT exam

5. Anti-fungal Therapy

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a. Amphotericin B - 1.5 mg/kg/day

b. addition of 5 FC or Rifampin now displaced by Itraconazole

D. Mucormycoses

1. Predisposing conditions

a. Diabetes and acidosis

b. Steroids

c. Adhesive tape and Elastoplast

d. Neutropenia

e. Dirt in wound

2. Species Encountered

a. Rhizopus

b. Mucor

3. Associated Physical Findings

a. Black eschar in nose

b. Black eschar on skin

c. Direct inhalation: pneumonia

4. Diagnostic Issues

a. Biopsy required - look for non-septate hyphae

5. Anti-fungal Therapy

a. Successful therapy requires wide surgical debridement

b. Amphotericin B at 1.0-1.5 mg/kg/day

c. Imidazoles are not effective

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E. Other Opportunistic Pathogens

1. Fusarium - neutropenic cancer patient with papular rash

a. Portals of entry - respiratory and skin, especially feet

b. Physical Findings

(1) Rash - subcutaneous nodules, painful papules with

central infarction and target lesions

(2) Cellulitis of toe or finger

c. Culture required to differentiate from Aspergillus: septate

hyphae on biopsy

d. Can be recovered from blood

e. Resistant to most anti-fungal agents

2. Pseudallescheria boydii

a. Sinusitis, endophthalmitis, pneumonia in immunocompromised

b. Involvement of CNS common

c. Typically resistant to Amphotericin B but susceptible to azoles

3. Malassezia furfur - NICU baby

a. Intralipid therapy

b. Same organism as in Tinea versicolor

c. Must be cultured with lipid supplements - Sabouraud's overlaid

with olive oil

d. Treatment requires removal of catheter but antifungal therapy

is not necessary

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4. Penicillium marneffei

a. Risk factors: cancer, AIDS, exposure to adreno corticosteroid

therapy

b. Physical findings include fever, weight loss, papular skin

lesions resembling molluscum contagiosum, lymphadenopathy

5. Dematiaceous fungi - Curvularia, Alternaria

a. Yeast-like cells or swollen septate hyphae

b. Stain with Fontana-Masson (melanin-specific stain)

c. Abscesses

(1) Subcutaneous

(2) Sinusitis

(3) Cerebral

6. Trichosporon beigelii

a. Endogenous colonization of the GI tract

b. Hosts with neutropenia or steroid use are susceptible

c. Multiple cutaneous lesions, fungemia, renal involvement

(hematuria)

d. Cryptococcal antigen test may be positive - shared cell-

surface antigen

e. "Tolerant" to Amphotericin B - use 1.5 mg/kg/day plus 5 FC

f. Add fluconazole if fungemia persists or lesions progress within

24 hours

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