Fungus MLS
Epidermophyton floccosum
Athlete's foot (tinea pedis), jock itch (tinea cruris), and other skin disorders
Chrysosporium species
Common contaminant; rarely associated with infections Colony Morphology: Varies, cottony, powdery, or granular; can be flat or raised, usually white, yellow, tan, but can be pink, orange or gray; reverse is white to brown Microscopic: Septate hyphae; one-celled clavate conidia with a rounded apex and broad flattened base. Resemble Blastomyces dermatitidis
Gliocladium species
Pathogenicity: Common contaminant Colony Morphology: Surface is white becoming dark green or pink; reverse is white Microscopic: Similar to Penicillium spp. but conidia clump together to form large clusters or balls
Bipolaris spp.
Septate hyphae dark hyphae and conidia cylindrical-four or five-celled porocondia with truncate hila(points of attachment) in clusters along a bent-knee shaped condiophore bipolar germ tube formation- germ tube from both poles of macroconidia
Candida albicans
Yeast infection, thrush
Cladosporium spp.
dark-colored septate hyphae chains of dark one-to four-celled blastoconidia with a distinct scar at each point of attachment repearedly forking shield cells
Cladophialophora boppii
long, unbranched round blastoconidia
Mucor species
non-septate hyphae, but also a vessel invader -> frontal lobe abscesses in DKA pts.
Acremonium spp.
"Balls of rice" Septate mycelium unbranched tapering conidiophores closely packed balls of sickle- or elliptical shaped cells
Absidia corymbifera
(Lichtheimia corymbifera complex)
Cunninghamella species
- Fast grower--Lid lifter - Aseptate hyphae - One-celled round sporangiola form at the tips of swollen denticles "tooth like denticles"
Alternaria spp.
- SEPTATE - DARK reproductive and hyphae structures - CHAINED poroconidia - HORIZONTAL and VERTICAL SEPTA - CLUB shaped bases with tapered apices
Absidia spp.
A rapidly growing non septate mold produced colonies with a gray surface resembling cotton candy that covered the entire plate. Microscopic examination revealed sporangiophores arising between, not opposite, the rhizoids and producing pear-shaped sporangia.
Curvularia spp.
Bent, knobby condiophore with swollen curved macroconidia due to large central cell.
Beauveria species
Common contaminant; very rarely involved in human infections Colony Morphology: White to cream or pinkish; very fluffy or powdery; reverse is white Microscopic: Hyphae are septate, delicate and narrow. Conidia producing structures exhibit zigzag terminal extensions (sympodial geniculate growth). Conidia are small, round to oval, and form singly on denticles. Resembles the dimorphic mold Sporothrix schenckii
Blastomyces dermatitidis (Blastomycosis)
Endemic in Mississippi and Ohio River valleys Human infection through inhalation Broad based budding yeast
Geotrichum candidum
Flavor enhancer in cheeses - Fungi
Cryptococcus neoformans
Fluconazole (prophylaxis in AIDS patients)
Exophiala dermatitidis
GROWTH at 42C Formerly Wangiella dermatitidis Black yeasty colonies develop velvety mycelium at edge Balls of conidia NITRATE NEGATIVE
Chaetomium species
Several species grow at 42 C are neurotopic and have casued cerebral phaeohyphomycosis
Fonsecaea pedrosoi
Surface is dark green or black covered with silver grey mycelium *most common worldwide cause of chromoblastomycosis*
Aspergillus niger
black conidia Citric acid
Hortaea werneckii
causative agent of Tinea nigra
Cladophialophora carrionii
erect conidiophores bearing branched chains of one-celled, brown blastoconidia
Fusarium
grows on wall boards in houses
Microsporum
infects hair and skin
Aspergillus flavus
produces a potentially lethal poison to animals who eat contaminated grain
Aspergillus fumigatus
septate hyphae with fruiting body; fungus ball, extrinsic asthma, vessel invader
Cladophialophora bantiana
very long, sparsely branching oval blastoconidia; predilection for the central nervous system