1 / 18

Zygomycosis

Zygomycota. Zygomycosis. Zygomycetes. Order Mucorales. Order Entomophthorales. Mucormycosis. Entomophthomycosis. Chronic. Acute. Mucorales infections Definition . Angiotropic (blood vessel-invading) The most common genera causing disease are: Rhizopus Absidia Mucor Rhizomucor

nickan
Download Presentation

Zygomycosis

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Zygomycota Zygomycosis Zygomycetes OrderMucorales Order Entomophthorales Mucormycosis Entomophthomycosis Chronic Acute

  2. Mucorales infectionsDefinition • Angiotropic (blood vessel-invading) • The most common genera causing disease are: • Rhizopus • Absidia • Mucor • Rhizomucor • Fast growing non-septate molds

  3. Clinical forms • The infection typically involves the: • Rhino-facial-cranial area • Lungs, gastrointestinal tract or skin • Other parts can also be affected

  4. Risk factors • The disease is associated with: • Diabetic ketoacidosis • Malnourished children • Severely burned patients • It is also seen in immunocompromised patients: • Leukemia • Lymphoma • AIDS • In patients using corticosteroids

  5. Invasive zygomycosis A 45-year-old woman with poorly controlled diabetes mellitus with facial and periorbital swelling due to zygomycosis. Author: Jose A Vazquez, MD, Associate Professor, Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases, Wayne State University School of Medicine

  6. Order Entomophthorales

  7. Entomophthorales infections • Causes subcutaneous zygomycosis • Tow genera are involved: • Conidiobolus • Basidiobolus

  8. Entomophthorales infections • Infections are: • Chronic • Slowly progressive • Restricted to the subcutaneous tissue • Not like Mucorales: • No vascular invasion or infarction

  9. Basidiobolus infection • Chronic inflammatory or granulomatous disease • Subcutaneous tissue of the limbs, chest, back or buttocks • Mostly in children (predominance in males)

  10. Conidiobolus infection • Chronic inflammatory or granulomatous disease • Nasal submucosa • Characterized by polyps or palpable subcutaneous masses • Occur mainly in adult (80% of cases)

  11. Zygomycosis caused by Basidiobolusranarum Zygomycosis caused by Conidiobolus

  12. Laboratory diagnosis • Specimens: • Aspirated material from sinuses • Sputum in pulmonary disease • Biopsy material • 10 or 20% KOH: • Typically contain thick-walled aseptatehyphae • Swollen cells (up to 50 um) and distorted hyphae may be present

  13. Zygomycosis Tissue sections stained with PAS

  14. Laboratory diagnosis (continued) • Culture: • SDA without cycloheximide at 30°C • Characterized by rapid growth

  15. Zygomycetes colony growing on Sabouraud glucose agar. 25C

  16. Absidia Rhizomucor

  17. Management of mucormycosis • The prognosis is bad • Most cases of gastric and pelvic disease are diagnosed at autopsy • Cases occurred in patients with pulmonary disease, leukemia, or with lymphomas, are usually fatal • Control of the diabetes, aggressive surgical debridement of involved tissue, and high doses of Amphotericin B are recommended

  18. Management of Entomophthoromycosis • Infections caused by Basidiobolus • Drug of choice saturated potassium iodide solution for 6-12 months • Oral ketoconazole and fluconazole • Sub-mucosal infections caused by Conidiobolusspecies: • Potassium iodide solution • Amphotericin B • Trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole

More Related