Micro Exam 2 Full Set

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How do humans become infection with helminths

Oral intake (contaminated food) or penetration of skin (Contaminated soil, water or infected animals)

Clonorchis sinesis

Oriental liver fluke

What are five other Candida species? Which one are resistance to which treatments?

Other species mainly in hospitalized and immunocompromised patients. Most common are -C. tropicalis, -C. parapsilosis, -C. glabrata, -C. krusei, -C. lusitaniae. Note: TQ!! -C. krusei consistently resistant to azoles. -C. glabrata usually resistant to azoles. -C. lusitaniae resistant to amphotericin.

Latent

Periods of no symptoms while the causative agent is inactive (shingles)

Lives in areas with large supply of water A. Protozoa B. Fungi C. Helminths D. Anthropods

Protozoa

This is a large diverse group of about 65,000 species

Protozoa

Unicellular, eukaryotic heterotrophs that are classified largely by how they move. A. Protozoa B. Fungi C. Helminths D. Anthropods

Protozoa

__________contain brown pigments called xanthopylls and a polysaccharide called laminarin +oil cell walls are composed of cellulose and alginic acid; also a thickening agent

Phaeophyta-brown algae

What is the Attachment Stage

Phage attaches by tail fibers to host cell

eukaryotic; unicellular organisms lack a cell wall. Most are chemoheterotrophes. name this organism

Protozoa

What two organisims join to make plankton?

Protozoa and Algae

What organisims use Flagella "swim"

Protozoa, Algae, and a few fungal and animal cells

4 types of Eukaryotic microorganisms

Protozoa, Fungi, Algae, Helminths

Buds that fail to detach and form a short chain of cells A. Pseudohypha B. Dermatophytes C. Stachybotrys

Pseudohypha

How does Protozoa move?

Pseudopods (also used to feed, flase foot, amoeboid motion(swim motion)), Flagella, Cilia

Superficial skin (keratinocytes)

Tissue location of Malassezia furfur

Cutaneous diseases: 1. Skin 2. Hair 3. Nails (mnemonic: 'tri' for the three locations of trichophyton)

Tissue location of Trichophyton

1. Subcutaneous or lymphocutaneous 2. Pulmonary

Tissue location of sporothrix

1. Skin 2. Nails

Tissue locations of Epidermophyton

1. Skin 2. Hair

Tissue locations of Microsporum

Selenium sulfide (does not prevent it from occurring again)

Treatment of tinea versicolor

Also known as flukes A. Cestodes B. Trematodes C. Nematoda D. Amebae

Trematodes

These helminths are leaf shaped with suckers A. Cestodes B. Trematodes C. Nematoda D. Amebae

Trematodes

What is Thrush?

Mucosal Candidiasis Thrush-Oral candidiasis, whitish plaques with red inflamed base. Indicative of defect of CMI (either from meds or disease) or neutrophils. Clue to progression of HIV or cancer.

What type of skin lesions can Paracoccidioides cause?

Mucosal lesions around mouth. On skin on the face. Also can cause genital paracoccidioides resembling Syphilis.

Portals of Entry

Mucous Membranes (GI Tract, Respiratory Tract, Genitourinary Tract, Conjunctiva) Skin, Parenteral

Are Helminths multicellular or unicellular?

Multicellular except in reproduction

What are molds?

Multicellular filamentous, "fluffy" mycelia (name of colonies) consisting of intertwined branching hyphae. Hyphae may be septate (with transverse walls) or nonseptate. Molds identified primarily by microscopic morphology.

What is the signature histological findings for Paracoccidioides?

Multiply budding yeast forms in Paracocci-"Mariner's wheel"

Septicemia

Multiplying of bacteria in the blood

Term used for all filaments of a mold. A. hyphae B. Conidium C. Mycelium D. Substrate

Mycelium

What is a plant that depends on symbiotic fungi A. Plasmagany B. Karyogamy C. Mycelium D. Mycorrhizae

Mycorrhizae

helps roots grow

Mycorrhizae

fungi are known to do what at the root of plants?

Mycorrhizae (help roots grow)

what are 2 Ameobozoas that cause brain disease?

Naegleria and Acanthamoeba

Eukaryotic Cell internal parts

Nucleus, Organells, Ribosomes, Cytoskeleton

Diphyllobothriasis

Numbness of fingers and toes

Lipids (medium to long chain fatty acids C12-C14)

Nutritional preference of Malassezia furfur

How are the different Tinea classified by body site?

1. Tinea capitis-Scalp and hair with patchy, scaling alopecia. 2. Tinea barbae-Beard region. 3. Tinea corporis-Body. 4. Tinea cruris-Groin--"Jock itch" 5. Tinea pedis-"Athlete's foot"--interdigital and/or moccasin distribution. 6. Tinea unguium/Onychomycosis - Nails.

Primary infection

Acute infection that cuases the inital illness

What is Acute pulmonary histoplasmosis?

Acute pulmonary histoplasmosis-with large inoculum, acute flu-like illness with fever, myalgias, cough. Hilar and mediastinal adenopathy, pulmonary infiltrates/nodules. Always goes to the LN. Usually resolves spontaneously.

What is the difference between the cell walls of bacteria and fungi?

Bacteria have peptidoglycan cell walls. Fungi have polysaccharides like chitin-glucans-mannans.

Bacteremia

Bacteria in the blood

Helminth

Chemoheterotroph, with tissues and organs, with a complex reproductive process, and acquires its food through absorption and ingestion.

An organism that uses organic molecules as a source of carbon and energy is called

Chemoheterotrophic

Fungi cell walls consist of what?

Chitin

Characteristic features of Algae

Chlorophy & other pigments

Name the Green Algae

Chlorophyta

plant-like store sugar starch as food 18S rRNA cholrophylls live in freshwater seasoning pepper /Codium

Chlorophyta (Green Algae)

Types of Algae

Chlorophyta, Bacillariophyta, Phaeophyta, Rhodophyta, Dinoflagellates, Oomycota

What is Chronic thoracic histoplasmosis?

Chronic thoracic histoplasmosis - may have progressive pulmonary fibrosis, pericarditis, mediastinitis. Dormant disease can reactivate. Can get so much fibrosis that get SVC syndrome. The problem is the host fibrotic response.

Name the Golden Yellow Algea

Chrysophyta

this Algae is most diverse in cell wall structure but uniform in use of the polysaccharide

Chrysophyta, the golden algae

Cryptosporidosis

Cider

Ciliophora

Ciliates, use cilia for feeding and movement, develop cysts, has defined mouth and feeding organelle, free-living, asexual and sexual reproduction

What do you see with cryptococcosis in AIDS?

Common opportunist in patients not on antiretroviral therapy. Often indolent-only fever and headache without stiff neck or altered neurologic function. Worse prognosis if CSF w/ minimal inflammatory response and high Ag titer. Therapy lifelong (or at least until immune reconstitution) because although initial therapy may resolve meningitis, recrudescent infection may occur from prostate reservoir.

Skin

Common tissue location for infection in all dermatophytes

1. Trichophyton: skin, hair, nails 2. Microsporum: skin, hair 3. Epidermophyton: skin, nails

Compare contrast tissue location for infection by all dermatophytes

1. Malassezia: superficial skin 2. Dermatophytes: cutaneous 3. Sporothrix: subcutaneous

Compare contrast tissue locations for Malassezia furfur, dermatophytes and sporothrix

Chitin, glucan and mannan

Components of fungal cell wall

Forms of Direct Damage

Disrupt cell function, produce waste, toxins

Opportunistic

Do not cause disease unless moved to another location in the body

ascomycetes also include plant pathogens such as what agents?

Dutch elm disease

Kill non-fungal cells

Purpose of using KOH in wet mount

Contagious

Easily spread between hosts

The infection occurs superficially in non-living tissue (which has no access to a blood supply)

Reason for lack of inflammation in Malassezia furfur

Are fungi prokaryotes or eukaryotes?

Eukaryotes.

all fungi are eukaryotic or prokaryotic?

Eukaryotic

Eukaryotic Cell Organells

Eukaryotic cells have specialized membrane-bound organells that carry out specific functions such as photosynthesis ( chlorplasts), ATP production (mitochondria), lipid and protein synthesis ( endopalsmic reticulm, golgi complex), cellular digestion (lysosomes) and lysosomes

What is Rhinocerebral mucormycosis?

Rhinocerebral mucormycosis-esp in poorly controlled diabetics. Like Aspergillosis. Severe destructive disease of nose, sinuses, orbits, brain. Headache, fever, pain, nasal drainage. Key diagnostic feature-black necrotic nasal or palatal mucosa. Need surgical removal. Other forms include cutaneous, GI, disseminated.

Name the Red Algae

Rhodophyta (red)

_________contains the pigment phycoerythrin, the storage molecule glycogen, and cell walls of agar or carrageenan

Rhodophyta-Red Algae

this algae is used as a thickening agent in microbiology media & foods like ice cream, toothpaste, syrups; salad dressing

Rhodophyta-Red Algae

What is the therapy for candidiasis?

Generally skin or mucosal disease can be treated topically or orally with azoles, with fluconazole the first choice. Invasive disease rx with fluconazole, echinocandins, or amphotericin B in one of its formulations. As previously mentioned, C. krusei and C. glabrata should be considered fluconazole resistant and C. lusitaniae amphotericin resistant.

branched, tubular filaments with crosswalls found in large fungi

Septate hyphae

Favus (trichophyton schonleinii

Serious form of tinea capitis

What type of reproduction does algae use

Sexual reproduction

How does sexual Fungal Replication work?

Sexual spores are formed through a process involving the fusing of 2 parental nuclei followed by meiosis (makes daughter cells)

Dermatophytes are A. Systemic Mycosis B. Subcutaneous Mycosis C. Cutaneous Mycosis D. Superficial Mycosis E. Oppertunistic Mycosis

Superficial Mycosis

Localized along hair shafts and epidermal cells A. Systemic Mycosis B. Subcutaneous Mycosis C. Cutaneous Mycosis D. Superficial Mycosis E. Oppertunistic Mycosis

Superficial Mycosis

What is the treatment and prevention for zygomycosis?

High mortality. Key to treatment is radical surgical excision. Improve underlying condition. Antifungal therapy is necessary, but adjunctive. Lipid formulations of amphotericin are best, but still mediocre. Posaconazole holds promise. Prevention: No available prevention. Low threshold for early diagnosis in high risk patients.

Describe the histology for Coccidioides.

Histology: Granulomas. Most cases asymptomatic but roughly 40% get pulmonary or extrapulmonary symptoms.

Describe Disseminated Histoplasmosis. What type of patients get it and what symptoms and signs do you see?

In patients with impaired CMI (e.g. AIDS, immunosuppressives) severe dissemination with multiorgan involvement and sepsis syndrome may occur. Yeasts seen in macrophages in spleen, liver, bone marrow, blood, skin, etc. Poor granuloma formation.

1. Plant handlers (gardners, florists) 2. Basketweavers

Occupations at risk of sporothrichosis

What serology can you do for Coccidioides?

Latex agglutination or tube precipitin IgM against coccidioidin generally found early after exposure but not specific. Complement fixation IgG high in disseminated disease. This is more specific. There is now a commercially available cocci antigen detection assay-role uncertain.

Cell Wall Components

M protein resists phagocytosis, Opa protein inhibits t cells, mycolic acid resists digestions

Vectors

Mechanical (on feet), Biological (reproduces in vector)

Protozoans require what kind of environments?

Moist

What do colonies of yeast look like on agar?

Moist mucoid or waxy colonies that resemble bacterial. Looks like poured hot wax on agar plate. Lab identification depends on physiologic characteristics, antigen detection, and some structural features seen on special stains.

What is Candida vulvovaginitis?

Mucosal Candidiasis Candida vulvovaginitis-Irritation, pruritus, "cottage cheese" discharge. May recur, persist. Does NOT require immune dysfunction. Common in women.

Parasitism

One benefits at the expense of another

Commensalism

One organism benefits, the other is unaffected

Trichomoniasis

Only exists in tropozoite form

What organisims use Cilia

Only protozoa and animals

What is the Penetration Stage

Opens cell wal, tail contracts to force tail core and DNA into cell

Candidiasis which causes yeast infection is a: A. Systemic Mycosis B. Subcutaneous Mycosis C. Cutaneous Mycosis D. Superficial Mycosis E. Oppertunistic Mycosis

Oppertunistic Mycosis

Due to a generally harmless fungus becoming pathogenic in a compromised host A. Systemic Mycosis B. Subcutaneous Mycosis C. Cutaneous Mycosis D. Superficial Mycosis E. Oppertunistic Mycosis

Oppertunistic Mycosis

Toxoplasmosis also known as Cat scratch disease is a: A. Systemic Mycosis B. Subcutaneous Mycosis C. Cutaneous Mycosis D. Superficial Mycosis E. Oppertunistic Mycosis

Oppertunistic Mycosis

Secondary Infection

Opportunistic infection after a primary infection

mycelium

whole root system of fungi

how do Chlamydospores form?

with a thickened cell wall INSIDE hyphae

hyphae

a root in fungi

Zygospores

a single-celled reproductive structure formed in sexual reproduction by some fungi; zygospores contain genetic information from two different mating types, - and +

Stalk

a slender or elongated structure that supports a plant or fungus or a plant part or plant organ

what is a pellicle?

a thin multilayered sheath that underlies the cell membrane.

What is the name of the motile, feeding stage that all protozoa have? A) a trophozoite B) a cyst

a trophozoite. The trophozoite feeds upon bacteria and small particulate nutrients

without crosswalls, (undivided) and coenocytic, (contain many nuclei, not separated by cell walls)

aseptate hyphae

reproduction of fungi is asexual or sexual?

asexual

How do Yeast reproduce?

asexual (budding)

reproduction of protozoans

asexual by mitosis and sexual conjugation

budding

asexual reproduction in which a part of the parent organism pinches off and forms a new organism

do fungi reproduce mostly; sexually or asexually?

asexually (without sex)

Multicellular algae typically reproduce in two ways, what are they?

asexually by fragmentation or sexually by an alternation of generations

Algal Bloom

associated with Dinoflag

where are Condiospores produced?

at tips or sides of hyphae, but not within a sac

what are the 4 benefits of Ascomycetes?

baking, brewing, research, and pharmaceuticals.

tightly woven hyphae that extend into multiple projections at ends

basidia

Mushrooms and other fruiting bodies of basidiomycetes are called this

basidiocarps

what are the ends called of basidia that produce sexually?

basidiospores

Clonorchis sinesis

biliary tract infection

buds coming off the parent cell are called?

blastoconidia

chitin

cell wall is made of

what do slime molds lack?

cell walls

Dikaryons

cells having 2 nuclei

what are the two types of slime molds ?

cellular and plasmodial

water molds have cell walls of ______

cellulose

basidiomycetes decompose what 2 things from dead plants?

cellulose and lignin

what are Fungi?

chemoheterotrophic eukaryotes with cell walls

Fungi are ________. A. lithotrophs B. photoautotrophs C. chemoautotrophs D. chemoheterotrophs E. photoheterotrophs

chemoheterotrophs

Which mode of nutrition do fungi possess? A) chemoheterotrophs B) photosynthesizers

chemoheterotrophs. Fungi require organic compounds for energy and carbon

what are the cell walls of fungi composed of?

chitin

what do cilaites of Alveolates have?

cilia and 2 nuclei

ciliphora

ciliates; move by cilia; have fuzzy shading in lab

Basidium

club-shaped, reproductive structure in which club fungi produce spores

Sorus

cluster of sporangia usually on underside of a fern frond

This permits the organism to survive when food, moisture or oxygen are lacking A. proglottids B. cytostome C. scolex D. cyst

cyst

many protozoa have a hardy resting stage called a _____, which is characterized by a thick capsule and a low metabolic rate.

cyst

Under certain adverse conditions, some protozoa produce a protective capsule. Is this a A) spore B) cyst

cyst. A cyst permits the organism to survive when food, moisture, or oxygen are lacking

Echinococcus granulosis

cysts in liver, lung, brain (neurocysticerosis)

Mouthlike opening, cilia take in food by waiving towards it. A. proglottids B. cytostome C. scolex D. oocyst

cytostome

haploid (1n, single nucleaus) sex cells

gametes/gametocytes

what color algae is Chrysophyta

golden, yellow green algae

Spirogyra

green algae, helical bottom dweller FILAMENTOUS

crustose are lichens that

grow appressed to their substrates

what is a harmful result in basidiomycetes decomposition?

hallucinatory chemicals or toxins.

Onchocerciasis

leopard skin

worms

parasites, animals, eukaryotic,multicellular, organism that can move

what happens after the basidiomycetes decompose cellulose and lignin?

nutrients are returned to the soil

Saprobes Haustoria Aerobic(with oxygen) facultative (survive in varitey of hostile conditions) anaerobic (no oxygen) Low Moisture acidic environements metabolize complex carbs these all represent nutrition of what?

nutrition of fungi

Where are conidium found A. within the substrate B. on top of the vegatative hyphae C. on top of the reproductive hyphae D. Within a fungus

on top of the reproductive hyphae

non-septate

one large tube in the mycelium

what is the nutrition of a slime mold?

phagocytic

Trypanosomiasis (African Sleeping Sickness)

tsetse fly

what do Water molds have in their mitochondria?

tubular cristae

Pandorina

type of Green algae, UNICELL

Algae have 3 different types of morphology. name them

unicellular colonial multicellular

yeast

unicellular, budding

protozoan

unicellular, parasite, eukaryote

Schistosoma haematobium

urinary bladder

An arthropod that transmits pathogenic microbes to a host is known as a/an .

vector

Insects that transmit diseases from one host to another are called __________. A. definitive hosts B. complete hosts C. vectors D. intermediate hosts

vectors

Flatworms

very thin, segmented body

how do zygosporangia develop?

via fusion of sexually compatible hyphae following meiosis

Diatoms, what in cell wall

What has Pectin & Silica in CW

Red Algae - what harvested

Carageenan, Agar come from what algae

water molds have spores with how many flagella?

2 flagella

Spores

-in a plant or fungus, an asexual reproductive cell that does not participate in fertilization -in prokaryotes, a dormant, relatively impervious cell that is resistant to destruction by heating.

How do you diagnose and treatment Pityriasis versicolor?

"Spaghetti and meatballs" appearance of budding yeast and hyphae on KOH. Growth markedly enhanced in presence of fat!!!! -M. furfur may cause invasive infections in patients receiving parenteral nutrition with lipid. -Also involved in pathogenesis of seborrheic dermatitis. Rx: topical pyrithione zinc, selenium sulfide, or azoles. Drying.

Basidiomycota

"club fungi" form basidiospores ex. mushrooms

Dueteromycota

"imperfect fungi" no sexual spores. budding ex. yeast infection, athletes foot; doesn't have hyphae

Ascomycota

"sack fungi" "fingers" form ascospores and sack structures. ex. mildews,lichens

Haploid

(genetics) an organism or cell having only one complete set of chromosomes (1N)

Diploid

(genetics) an organism or cell having two sets of chromosomes or twice the haploid number (2N)

Frond

-A leaf of a fern or cycad, usually consisting of multiple leaflets -A large, fanlike leaf of a palm tree. -A leaflike structure such as the thallus of a lichen or a seaweed.

What does Aspergillus hyphae look like in tissue?

-Acute angle branching hyphae. -Septate. -Narrow hyphae.

name the 2 types of Conidiospores

2 types a. Arthroconidia b. blastoconidia

What does zygomycete hyphae look like in tissue?

-RIght angle branching hyphae. -Nonseptate. -Broad and irregular hyphae.

What are the habitats of pathogenic fungi?

-Soil -Bird or bat feces -On vegetation -On the skin and mucous membranes of animals -Some have distinctive ecologic and geographical niches!!

What are the non-invasive forms of Aspergillus?

1. Allergic Bronchopulmonary Aspergillosis and Allergic Fungal Sinusitis. 2. Aspergilloma.

Protozoas are defined by what 3 characteristics?

1. Eukaryotic 2. Unicellular 3. Lack a cell wall

What are the 2 major phyla of parasitic Helminths?

1. Flatworms 2. Roundworms (nematodes)

Mechanisms of Pathogenicity

1. Portal of Entry 2. Penetration of Host Defense 3. Damage to Host Cells 4. Portal of Exit

What are the three types of mycoses that you can have of the skin?

1. Superficial- confined to surface of stratum corneum. e.g.: Pityriasis versicolor 2. Cutaneous-involving keratinized tissue of skin, hair, nails. e.g.: Dermaophytoses (Tinea). 3. Subcutaneous-involving skin and subcutaneous tissues through inoculation. May disseminate. e.g.: Sporotrichosis, Mycetoma, Dematiaceous pigment fungi.

What are the two ways to get Renal candidiasis?

1. Will see multiple abscesses on kidneys related to hematogenous seeding from candidemia. 2. May also have ascending infection with thick white urine and fungus balls that may obstruct urinary tract.

One yeast can produce how many daughter cells by budding A. 4 B. 12 C. 24 D. 36

24

how many known species of molds and yeasts does the divsion Ascomycota contain?

32,000 known species

Giardia lamblia

4 nucleate cyst, 2 nucleate trophozoite

Fungi grow best at what pH A. 5 B. 9 C. 7 D. 3

5

Sporangia

A capsule in fungi and plants in which meiosis occurs and haploid spores develop.

Communicable Disease

A disease spread from one host to another

Zygote

A fertilized egg, produced by the union of a male and female gamete. A zygote goes on to develop into a multicellular organism by repeated cell division

Bryophytes

A group of nonvascular plants comprising of mosses, hornworts, and liverworts.

Archegonium

A multicellular, often flask-shaped, egg-producing organ occurring in mosses, ferns, and most gymnosperms. (female sex organ)

Thallus

A plant body that is not differentiated into stem and leaves and lacks true roots and a vascular system.

Gymnosperm

A plant, such as a cycad or conifer, whose seeds are not enclosed within an ovary.

Prothallium

A small, flat, delicate structure produced by a germinating spore and bearing sex organs. It is the gametophyte of ferns and some other plants.

Antheridium

A sperm-producing organ occurring in seedless plants, fungi, and algae. (male sex organ)

Rhizoids

A thread-like outgrowth or root hair on the underside of the thallus in some lower plants, esp. mosses and liverworts.

What will Invasive Pulmonary Aspergillosis look like on CT?

A triangular/wedge lesion in the chest. On 3D imaging will look like a cone/pyramid. It indicates vascular occlusion and pulmonary infarction from invasive disease.

What is the treatment for Aspergillosis?

ABPA (Allergic Bronchopulmonary Aspergillosis) -Steroids (since this is an allergic phenomenon), possibly itraconazole. Aspergilloma-Surgery if symptomatic. Little role for antifungal therapy since drugs cannot reach as aspergilloma. Invasive Aspergillosis-High mortality. Try to decrease immunocompromise. Voriconazole!, amphotericin, echinocandins are options.

What are general of Zygomycetes?

Absidia, Mucor, Rhizomucor, Cuninghamella, Rhizopus species.

Epidemic Disease

Acquired by many hosts in a given area in a short time (Flu)

Describe fungal pathogenesis.

Aerial conidia break off, dispersed in environment. Spread generally from the environment to people or animals with limited person-to-person spread. May have colonization leading to invasive disease. Lungs and skin are prominent entry sites for many fungi.

What do we get from Brown Algae

Algin, thickener, comes from what algae

Fungal Nutrition

All fungi are heterotrophic, consumer, from organic materials. Most are saprobes but some can be parasites

What is Allergic Bronchopulmonary Aspergillosis and Allergic Fungal Sinusitis?

Allergic Bronchopulmonary Aspergillosis and Allergic Fungal Sinusitis- In individuals with underlying asthma or allergic rhinitis, colonization may lead to IgE Abs with allergic type 1 and 3 hypersensitivity responses and exacerbation of asthma or rhinitis with fluctuating pulmonary infiltrates and eosinophilia. May develop bronchiectasis. The key is that this is an allergic/immunogenic response to Aspergillus is a subset of patients.

Sexual Reproduction

Allows fungi to create genetic variants, most fungi reproduce sexually at some point, 2 different organisms (+,-) mate to make fertil hyphae, used in the classification of fungi (phylum)

B, Planospore

Also known as Zoospore?

Club fungi

Also known as: A. Algal fungi B. Club fungi C. imperfect fungi D. sac fungi

sac fungi

Also known as: A. Algal fungi B. Club fungi C. imperfect fungi D. sac fungi

Ascomycota

Also known as: A. Zygomycota B. Ascomycota C. Basidiomycota D. Deuteromycota

Basidiomycota

Also known as: A. Zygomycota B. Ascomycota C. Basidiomycota D. Deuteromycota

Antigenic Variation

Alters surface protiens

Are Protozoa always multicellular or unicellular?

Always Unicellular

What are drug examples of Polyenes?

Amphotericin, Nystatin.

Systemic

An Infection throughout the body (Measles)

What is a mycotic aneurysm?

An aneurysm caused by bacteria. Called mycotic aneurysm since the bacteria look like mushrooms.

What fat is predominately in animals? In fungi?

Animals = cholesterol. Fungi = ergosterol.

Maturation Stage

Assemble phages from replicated proteins

CHaracterized by segmented bodies, hard external skeletons, and jointed legs A. Protozoa B. Fungi C. Helminths D. Anthropods

Anthropods

Cause of west nile virus, lyme disease and the bubonic plague A. Protozoa B. Fungi C. Helminths D. Anthropods

Anthropods

What serology can you do for Histoplasmosis?

Antibody assays-CF and ID tests available with H and Y antigens. Cross reactions with other fungi. Rise in titer helpful. Serum/urine antigen detection-very helpful to diagnose disseminated disease!

1. Imidazoles (inhibit synthesis) 2. Polyenes (binds directly to ergoesterol)

Antifungals that target ergosterol

What is the diagnosis of cryptococcosis?

Antigen detection in CSF, serum, and/or urine—Latex beads are coated with specific antibody against polysaccharide antigen. The fluid is diluted to various titers. The highest titer at which agglutination occurs is reported. India Ink of CSF-not as sensitive. Culture (with detection of melanin on catecholamine-containing media).

Describe Aspergillus fumigatus. What is their key morphological feature?

Aspergillus fumigatus (most common human pathogen) and other species are ubiquitous saprophytic molds found in soil, vegetation. NOT dimorphic, just a mold. Aerial hyphae have chains of conidia that become airborne. Key morphologic feature in tissue: septate hyphae that branch at acute angles. Most cases are in compromised hosts.

Which spore forms within the conidium A. Arthrospore B. Aplanospore C. Conidiospore D. Planospores

Aplanospore

1. Dematiaceous (gray, olive colored) 2. Hyaline (clear)

Appearance of KOH mounted organisms

Bright pink

Appearance of PAS mounted organisms

Blue-white to black

Appearance of calcofluor stained organisms

Black

Appearance of silver stained organism

Types of Protozoa

Archaezoa, Amoebozoa, Apicomplexa, Ciliates

___________are formed by the fragmentation of septate hyphae into single, slightly thickened cells

Arthroconidia

Describe Coccidioides pathogenesis.

Arthroconidia inhaled into lungs, transform into spherules filled with endospores (the yeast or parasitic form). Spherules rupture, release endospores -> more spherules.

What are the reproductive forms for Coccidioides immitis?

Arthroconidia spread through air, with higher incidence of infection after heavier rains and during dust storms. Epidemic after Northridge quake.

Contains the spores Blastospore, conidiospores, arthrospores, and ascospores. A. Zygomycota B. Ascomycota C. Basidiomycota D. Deuteromycota

Ascomycota

Sac fungi: A. Zygomycota B. Ascomycota C. Basidiomycota D. Deuteromycota

Ascomycota

Unicellular yeasts A. Zygomycota B. Ascomycota C. Basidiomycota D. Deuteromycota

Ascomycota

All of these are asexual spores EXCEPT: A. Conidiospore B. Chlamydospore C. Blastospore D. Ascospores

Ascospores

Ascomycetes sexual spores

Ascospores; Sexual Spores created inside an ascus, when +,- hyphae mate, 2 sex organs fuse and form dikaryons, cells enlarge to form ascus

How does Asexual Fungal Replication work?

Asexual spores are the result of the mitotic division of a parent cell

How do Molds reproduce?

Asexual-Mitosis(budding(breaking off hyphye) or form asexual spores). The primary way is spore generation/sexual-Miosis (spores)

What is Aspergilloma?

Aspergilloma-preexisting cavities (e.g. from tuberculosis) may be colonized by Aspergillus with fungus ball formation, sometimes with hemoptysis.

What is the treatment and prevention for histoplasmosis?

Asymptomatic or mild pulmonary disease in immunocompetent-no specific treatment More severe pulmonary disease-itraconazole Disseminated disease--initial ampho followed by itraconazole. Lifelong in AIDS patients. Mediastinal, pericardial involvement may require surgery, stents, etc. Prevention: Avoidance of exposure to bird/bat droppings. Appropriate respiratory precautions.

What are the Stages of the Lytic Cycle

Attachment, Penetration, Biosythesis, Maturation, Release

What are the steps of Animal Virus Multiplication

Attachment, Penetration, Uncoating, Biosynthesis, Maturation, Release

CRyptococcus neoformans: A. Zygomycota B. Ascomycota C. Basidiomycota D. Deuteromycota

Basidiomycota

Club fungi: A. Zygomycota B. Ascomycota C. Basidiomycota D. Deuteromycota

Basidiomycota

Mushrooms, rust, smut A. Zygomycota B. Ascomycota C. Basidiomycota D. Deuteromycota

Basidiomycota

Spores: Basidiospore and Chlamydospore A. Zygomycota B. Ascomycota C. Basidiomycota D. Deuteromycota

Basidiomycota

Basidiomycetes Sexual Spores

Basidiospore, Haploid sexual spores formed on a basidium, through meiosis the basidium forms 4 haploid nuclei, which develop into basidospores

Make sure you know the learning objectives.

Be able to explain the notion of an opportunistic pathogen. Understand the clinical presentations of aspergillosis related to host factors with implications for diagnosis and treatment. Understand the risk factors and clinical presentations of mucor/zygomycete infections. Recognize the key diagnostic stages of aspergillus and mucor. Understand presentations of pneumocystis.

How do you diagnose Coccidioides?

Best is histologic identification of endospore-filled spherules in tissue. Cultures done at room temperature to grow mycelial form with characteristic arthroconidia. LAB HAZARD! Poor yield of cultures at 37C for parasitic yeast form.

What is blastomycosis? What does it look like at various stages/forms?

Blastomyces dermatitidis: Dimorphic fungus-mold with thin hyphae and ovoid conidia (infectious form) at 25C, thick walled budding yeast with broad attachment to single bud in tissue at 37C. Reservoir not clear but soil likely with cases somewhat clustering around river banks.

What is cutaneous blastomycosis?

Blastomycosis that forms in the skin. Disfiguring.

All of the following are sexual spores EXCEPT: A. Ascospores B. Blastospore C. Zygospores D. Basidiospore

Blastospore

Mutalism

Both organisms benefit

How does mold reproduce? What is the reproductive structure?

Both sexual, asexual. Most medically-important fungi reproduce asexually (called imperfect fungi). Reproductive structures: Conidia= Spores. Develop from aerial hyphae. Reproduction occurs by conidia separating from the hyphae and dispersing in the environment.

Release Stage

Breaks cell wall open to release Virus killing the host bacteria

What type of buds do you see with blastomycosis?

Broad based bud.

Carb storage material, what algae type

Brown algae, what type of storage material

what algae types brown in color

Brown, Diatom, Dinoflag

Multicellular algae types

Brown, Red, Green have what in common

Algae that has Cellulose Cell Walls

Brown, Red, Green, Dinoflagelletes what in common

What are the parts of a Viron

Capsid which is made of Capsomere and a Nucleic Acid, some with an envelope, and spikes which act as receptors

How do you diagnose and treat Sporothrix schenckii?

Budding yeast forms may be found in tissue, along with asteroid bodies (yeasts are cigar shaped and surrounded by eosinophilic immune complexes), but diagnosis generally depends on cultures with dimorphic growth at 25 (mold) and 35 (yeast). Rx -Oral itraconazole. -IV amphotericin if severe

Forms of Penetration or Evasion of Host Defense

Capsules, Cell Wall components, Enzymes, Antigenic Variation, Invasins, Intracellular Growth

Parts of Complex Virus

Capsid-containing DNA or RNA, Sheath-Acts as a syringe, Baseplate-pin holds it in place on bacteria, Tails-receptors to bind to bacteria

Describe Candida albicans.

Candida albicans—most common, important in all clinical settings. Known for yeasts and pseudohyphae, but actually dimorphic with germ tubes, hyphae, and chlamydospore formation at 37C. Note: C. albicans unlike other dimorphic fungi with mold growing at 37C.

Oncovirus

Capable of turning normal cells into cancer cells

Trichinella spiralis

CPK levels up

Are Algae multicellular or unicellular?

Can be unicellular or multicellular

Are Fungi multicellular or unicellular?

Can be unicellular or multicellular

How can histoplasmosis affect the eye or the skin?

Can get ocular histoplasmosis in which have damage to retina. Can get skin lesions with disseminated histoplasmosis that looks like basal cell carcinoma.

Where is candida albicans normally found? How do you get infected by it?

Candida albicans commensal of human mouth, GI tract, vagina. Limited role of sexual transmission. Infection usually endogenous related to: -Trauma & maceration of skin -Diabetes -Antibiotic use -Malignancy -Malnutrition -Immunosuppressive meds or illnesses -Indwelling catheters

Yeast infections are caused by A) Candida albicans B) Stachybotrys

Candida albicans. Candida albicans yeast infections may occur in the mouth as thrush or as vulvovaginal candidiasis in females.

What are drug examples of echinocandins?

Caspofungin, Micafungin, Anidulofungin.

Toxoplasmosis

Cat litter

Etiology

Cause of Disease

Premature infants giving IV lipid supplements

Cause of disseminated Malassezia furfur

Individuals working in the sun who perspire a lot (creates a warm wet environment for the organism)

Cause of tinea versicolor

Eukaryotic Cell Boundrys

Cell wall and Cytoplasmic matrix

Describe host response and risk factors associated with fungal pathogenesis.

Cell-mediated immunity/granulomatous inflammation reacting to cell wall components. -Patients with impaired CMI at heightened risk for severe disease! Neutrophils also important, especially for Candida and Aspergillus, with overwhelming infection in profoundly neutropenic patients (Such as those on chemotherapy). Prolonged antibiotic exposure (selecting for fungi since antibiotics don't affect fungi) and indwelling catheters important for nosocomial fungal infection.

Also known as a tapeworm A. Cestodes B. Trematodes C. Nematoda D. Amebae

Cestodes

2 Types of Flatworms

Cestodes (tapeworms, long, ribbon-like) and Trematodes (Flukes, flat, ovoid bodies)

Types of Helminth

Cestodes, Tapeworms, Nematodes, Heartworm

Localized lesion at site of injury

Clinical signs of cutaneous sprothrichosis

Permanent hair loss

Clinical signs of favus

Lesion found along distribution of lymphatics with most distal lesion being the site of injury

Clinical signs of lymphocutaneous sprothrichosis

1. Red ring shape 2. Itching

Clinical signs of ringworm

Either hypo- or hyperpigmentation of the skin (more commonly hypopigmentation)

Clinical signs of tinea versicolor

Enyzmes

Coagulase, Kinases, Hyaluronidase, Collagenase, IgA Protease Destroys IgA antibodies

Describe Coccidioides immitis.

Coccidioides immitis: Dimorphic fungus living as mold (saprophyte) in soil in semiarid regions of southwestern US, Central America, South America. Greatest in Arizona and Central Valley. Cases outside endemic area due to travel or shipping of materials from endemic area.

Infection

Colonization of the body by pathogens

Basidiomycetes Asexual Spores

Conidia

Describe the pathogenesis of histoplasmosis.

Conidia inhaled, develop into yeast cells, engulfed by alveolar macrophages. INTRACELLULAR, resistant to lysosomal killing. Replication by budding in macrophages, with dissemination though R-E system. In endemic areas up to 90% have positive skin test indicating exposure. Of these, >95% asymptomatic, controlled by CMI but with later evidence of calcified granulomas especially in lungs/ spleen. Will see this on CT imaging.

Describe the pathogenesis of Aspergillus.

Conidia inhaled. In normal hosts, destroyed by alveolar macrophages, neutrophils. In hosts with impaired CMI or especially neutropenia, conidia germinate to produce hyphae with tendency to invade BLOOD vessels or preexisting LUNG cavities.

Describe the pathogenesis of Paracoccidioides.

Conidia presumably inhaled. Typically dormant pulmonary infection with granulomas for extended period of time. Clinical disease, like TB, from reactivation either in lungs or with dissemination to skin, mucosa, nodes, spleen, liver, adrenals. Histology is mixture of caseating granulomas and microabscesses.

Exospores formed on the outside of the conidium A. Arthrospore B. Chlamydospore C. Conidiospore D. Planospores

Conidiospore

What produces asexual spores A. Vegatative hyphae B. Reproductive hyphea C. Conidium D. Mycelium

Conidium

Endemic Disease

Constantly present in a population ( a cold)

What is the mechanism of action of 5-Flucytosine?

Converted by fungal cytosine deaminase into 5-fluorouracil; inhibits DNA synthesis. (Animal cells lack cytosine deaminase.)

Three Types of Lichens

Crustose, Fruticose, Foliose

What is cryptococcosis? What are the two species and where do you find each?

Cryptococci are yeasts with a thick polysaccharide capsule: 1. Cryptococcus neoformans-found especially in pigeon droppings. Main pathogen in temperate areas. Meningitis in immunocompromised. 2. Cryptococcus gattii-assoc w/ eucalyptus trees in tropics but ongoing outbreak in Pacific Northwest. May be somewhat more pathogenic for intact hosts. Pro Tip: Cryptococcus neoformans is the main one.

1. Sabouraud + antibiotics 2. Blood agar + antibiotics

Culture media used for fungi

One can acquire this by contact with infected hairs and epidermal cells such as shower floors or hairs. A. Systemic Mycosis B. Subcutaneous Mycosis C. Cutaneous Mycosis D. Superficial Mycosis E. Oppertunistic Mycosis

Cutaneous Mycosis

Lichens composed of fungi living in partnership with 2 types of photosynthetic microbes, called

Cyanobacteria and green algae

Protozoans vs bacteria vs helmanths vs fungi

Cyst-endospore-endospore-spore trophozoite-vegatitative cell-helmenths

What is the pathogenesis of Pneumocystis? What are the symptoms associated with Pneumocystis pneumonia? When do you see extrapulmonary symptoms?

Cysts inhaled. In susceptible patients (e.g. HIV infected patients with CD4 count <250) disease is predominantly pulmonary, with alveolar filling with plasma cells and edema. See spongy material in alveoli. Pneumocystis pneumonia-acute-to-subacute fever, dry cough, dyspnea. Exam with diffuse crackles. Chest X-ray with bilateral diffuse infiltrates (but may be normal or occasionally nodular/cavitary in AIDS). Hypoxemia with increased A-a gradient. Extrapulmonary pneumocystis involving various body sites seen almost exclusively in AIDS patients receiving aerosolized pentamidine prophylaxis. Could have Splenic Pneumocystosis!

the division of a cell's cytoplasm is called

Cytokinesis

How can Viruses be Identified

Cytopathic Effects, Serological Tests, Nucleic Acids

Pathogeneis

Development of Disease

what are 3 ways humans use Fungi?

Food, beverages, and pharmacauticals

Allergic response to dermatophytic fungal antigen

Definition of ID reaction

Reproductive portion of fungi

Definition of conidia

Internal walls that separate one hypha from another

Definition of cross walls

Organism requiring organic carbon (e.g. all fungi)

Definition of heterotrophic

Single filamentous cells of fungi

Definition of hyphae

Organism surviving on dead or decaying matter

Definition of saprophytic organism

Little inflammation

Degree of inflammation involved with Microsporum audouinii

Highly inflammatory

Degree of inflammation involved with Microsporum canis

What are the molds of Dermatophytoses? What adaptations do these molds have?

Dermatophytes—molds: Trichophyton, Microsporum, and Epidermophyton species. Keratinases, elastases. Adapted to particular hosts. Animal dermatophytes may cause more severe disease in humans.

99% of fungal diseases. A. Zygomycota B. Ascomycota C. Basidiomycota D. Deuteromycota

Deuteromycota

Candida albicans: A. Zygomycota B. Ascomycota C. Basidiomycota D. Deuteromycota

Deuteromycota

Imperfect fungi: A. Zygomycota B. Ascomycota C. Basidiomycota D. Deuteromycota

Deuteromycota

ONLY asexual spores: A. Zygomycota B. Ascomycota C. Basidiomycota D. Deuteromycota

Deuteromycota

1. KOH mount (because it is cutaneous) 2. Fluorescence (UV) on lesions

Diagnosis of Malassezia furfur

KOH only (Wood lamp will not reveal organism)

Diagnosis of epidermophyton

1. KOH mount 2. Wood lamp

Diagnosis of microsporum

Cigar-shaped yeast in tissue

Diagnosis of sporothrichosis

KOH only (Wood lamp will not reveal organism)

Diagnosis of trichophyton

silica cell walls (frustules) major component of phytoplankton; major source of world's oxygen.

Diatoms

what algae has OIL as storage material

Diatoms - what kind storage material

what algae floats until it dies (overlapping top & bottom)

Diatoms do what until they die

Algae that has Pectin & Silica in CW

Diatoms have what in CW

How does Algae aquire food

Diffusion across membrane is what function for algae

What are endemic fungi? Give examples.

Dimorphic Fungi with environmental mold forms, disease-producing yeast forms. Think GEOGRAPHY!! Cause disease in normal hosts but worse in patients with altered CMI. Examples: Coccidioides immitis, Histoplasma capsulatum, Blastomyces dermatitidis, Paracoccidioides brasiliensis. Pro Tip: These are all dimorphic fungi!

What algae has starch as storage material

Dinoflag- has what kind of storage material

Transmission of Disease

Direct (respiratory, stds), Indirect, Droplet (airbourne droplets)

Pulmonary sporotrichosis (alcoholic-rose-garden-sleeper disease)

Disease cause by sporothrix in alcoholics

Chronic Disease

Disease develops slowly (TB, Hep B, Mono)

What is a Persistant Infection

Disease processes occurs over a long period of time, generally fatal

Sporadic

Disease that occurs occasionally in a population. I.e. Typhoid Fever

1. Acute pulmonary 2. Chronic pulmonary 3. Disseminated infections

Diseases caused by all deep fungal infections

Skin infections (ringworm, tinea)

Diseases caused by dermatophytes

How do you diagnose and treat dermatophytes?

Dx with scrapings, KOH to verify fungal infection (vs. eczema). Some fluoresce skin or hair under UV light. Characteristic macroconidia distinguish species on cultures. Rx with topical azoles or terbinafine. -Oral rx if inadequate response or for onychomycosis.

What are the two layers of cytoplasm in Protozoa?

Ectoplasm:Clear, outer layer used for locomotion, feeding, and protection. Endoplasm:Granular inner layer, houses nucleus, mitochondria and vacuoles

what ameobozoa causes fatal dystentry?

Entamoeba

The ONLY pathogenic amoeba found in the human intestines A. Entamoeba histolytica B. Taenia saginata C. Trichinella spiralis D. Enterobius vermicularis

Entamoeba histolytica

Which parasitic helminth lives near the anus of infected children? A) Enterobius vernicularis B) Trichinella spiralis

Enterobius vernicularis

True or False All fungi produce both asexual spores and sexual spores

False

True or False Nematodes are always intestinal parasites

False

True/False Fungal spores are the same as bacterial spores

False

True/False All flatworms and roundworms are parasitic

False, not all are parasitic

Asexual spores formed by joint

Features of arthroconidia

Buds forming off of yeast (snowman appearance)

Features of blastoconidia

1. Asexual spores forming off most distal hyphae 2. Airborne

Features of conidia

Hyphal and yeast forms

Features of dimorphic yeast

1. Lack of cross walls 2. Varying hyphae width 3. Broad angle branching

Features of nonseptate hyphae

Hyphae separated by constrictions (rather than cross walls)

Features of pseudohyphae

1. Cross walls 2. Width is regular

Features of septate hyphae

Spores found inside fungal spherules (ball in a ball appearance)

Features of spherules and endospores

Zygote

Fertilized egg

Brown Algae

Filamentous (grow end to end), seaweed like kelp

Describe pulmonary Coccidioides. What is it like and what symptoms are associated with it? What do you see on the skin? On CXR?

Flu-like illness with fever, cough, arthralgias known as Valley Fever. -Notice this triad of fever, cough, and arthralgias. May have associated erythema nodosum as sign of vigorous CMI response. Seen on the lower extremities. CXR findings include infiltrates, adenopathy, pleural effusions, nodules, cavitation. Patients with localized pulmonary cocci typically have LOW complement fixation antibody titers.

What do you see histologically with Pneumocystis pneumonia?

Foamy alveolar exudate in Pneumocystis pneumonia.

Yeast (mnemonic: yeast in the beast) except for candida, which occurs as pseudohyphae

Form of dimorphic yeast seen in humans

Hyphae (mnemonic: mold in the cold) except for candida, which occurs as yeast

Form of dimorphic yeast seen in the environment

Sporangiospores

Formed in a saclike head (sporangium), which is attached to a stalk (sporangiophore)

Prevalence

Fraction of a population having a specific disease at a given time

Incidence of Disease

Fraction of a population that contracts a disease during a specific time

Conida

Free spores, pinch off the tip of a fertile hypha or by segmentation of a vegetative hypha

Diphyllobothriasis

Freshwater fish Trout, pike, perch

Arthroconidia

Fungal morphology

Blastoconidia

Fungal morphology

Conidia

Fungal morphology

Dimorphic

Fungal morphology

Nonseptate hyphae

Fungal morphology

Pseudohyphae

Fungal morphology

Septate hyphae

Fungal morphology

Spherules and endospores

Fungal morphology

Yeast

Fungal morphology

Have enzymes to break down almost anything

Fungi

Responsible for food spoilage and disease in plants and humans. A. Protozoa B. Helminths C. Fungi D. Arthropods

Fungi

These are chemoheterotrophs A. Protozoa B. Fungi C. Helminths D. Anthropods

Fungi

They have a cell wall and cell membrane that contain sterols A. Protozoa B. Fungi C. Helminths D. Anthropods

Fungi

This has 100000 know species

Fungi

What is the size difference between yeast and bacteria?

Fungi are 4-15x bigger than bacteria.

these are all chracteristics of what? Chemoheterotrophic Chitin/ Cell wall Lack Chlorophyll (no photosynthesis)

Fungi-characteristics

Every naturally occurring organic material on earth can be attacked by a ...

Fungus

How do you diagnose Pneumocystosis?

Giemsa, toluidine blue, methenamine silver, calcofluor white or direct fluorescent monoclonal antibody stains of induced sputum, bronchoalveolar lavage, transbronchial biopsy, or open lung biopsy specimens. Larger organism burden in AIDS patients--induced sputum and lavage more sensitive. In organ transplant patients, commonly need biopsy.

What is the gram characteristic of fungi?

Gram positive.

Volvox

Green algae, forms colony that swims in unison, flagella & eyespot COLONY FORMING

Unicellular algae types

Greens, Diatoms, Dinoflag have what in common

High/Low Fungi and grow in _____ sugar or salt concentrations

HIGH

How do you diagnose Zygomycosis?

Hallmark of diagnosis is detection of broad nonseptate hyphae in biopsy material from affected areas.

Are most fungi, many algae, and some protozoa haploid or diploid?

Haploid

Sarcodina

Has pseudopodia, is an amoebae, asexual reproduction only, single nucleus (most), free living (can get in body but not paracitic)

Zygomycetes sexual spores

Has sexual spores = zygospores; Hyphae form +,- strains fuse to create a zygote, wall disrupted when conditions are favorable, spore germinates into a mycelium

Mastigophora

Has single nucleus, flagellated (most), sexual reproduction(mytosis, has male and female for genetic diversity), form cysts, free living (or parasites)

a structure of a parasitic plant or fungus that penetrates host tissues to obtain food and water

Haustoria

Ascomycetes Asexual spores

Have different types of conidia

Multicellular animals and many are parasitic. A. Arthropods B. Protozoa C. Helminths

Helminths

Produce a large number of eggs. A. Protozoa B. Fungi C. Helminths D. Anthropods

Helminths

What is histoplasmosis capsulatum?

Histoplasma capsulatum: Dimorphic fungus with mold form found in soil, BIRD (Starlings)/BAT droppings worldwide. Most cases in Midwest river valleys. Along Ohio and Mississippi river. Indiana, Kentucky. Infectious microconidia spread through the air. Other animals may be infected. -Hazard for spelunkers (exposure to bat guano).

Plaques

Holes in cell layer caused by viral destruction of host cells

Ancylostoma duodena, Necator americanus

Hookworm disease

from other living organisms via modified hyphea called haustoria

How do other fungi get nutrients?

Lichens

Hybrid of algae and fungus. Provides an attachment point by fungus, algae feeds off the fungus.

Septate hypha

Hypha that are composed of individual cells seperated from one another by cell walls

Microscopic fungi have what two morphologies?

Hyphae and Yeast, some are dimorphic (can take either form but not at same time)

Herd Immunity

Immunity in most of a population (generally due to vaccines)

Where geographically do you find blastomycosis?

In North America, geography similar to histoplasmosis but extends into Southern Canada. Symptomatic disease less frequent than histoplasmosis.

What is invasive Aspergillosis?

In severely immunocompromised, conidia germinate in lungs with hyphal pneumonia with lung necrosis, invasion of blood vessels. May have dissemination to BRAIN, GI tract, liver, kidney, sinuses/orbits, etc.

Vehicle Transmission

Inanimate resevoir (food, water, air)

Five Stages of Disease

Incubation Period (no signs or symptoms), Prodromal Period (mild signs or symptoms), Period of Illness (most severe), Period of Decline (vulnerable to secondary), Period of Convalescence ( can last for years)

Describe the pathogenesis of blastomycosis.

Inhalation of conidia. Primary pulmonary disease may present with fever, cough, myalgias. May lead to chronic pneumonia. Host response both neutrophils, granulomas. Dissemination more common in immunocompromised. Key sites: skin, bone, genitalia, CNS.

What is the mechanism of action of Echinocandins?

Inhibit fungal Beta glucan synthesis, disrupting cell wall integrity. (Animals have no cell walls.)

What is the mechanism of action of Griseofulvin?

Inhibit fungal growth by binding to microtubules, disrupting mitotic spindles. (Animal microtubules less sensitive.)

Characteristics of Viruses

Intracellular parasites, contain DNA or RNA, No ribosomes, No ATP, some have spikes, some are enveloped, contain a protein coat

What CT finding is classic for invasive Aspergillosis?

Invasive aspergillosis with "air crescent" and halo sign on CT. Looks like crescent shaped dark region. Have necrosis around it.

Describe Pityriasis versicolor.

It in the superficial skin. Also known as Tinea versicolor. Chronic nonpruritic hyper- and hypopigmented macules on the trunk in areas of sweating. Minimal scaling. Caused by a lipophilic yeast, Malassezia furfur. Normal flora of skin and scalp.

Fungi Imperfecti

Lacks a sexual reproduction phase, Usually conidia

Endotoxin

Lipid compostition, Gram negative, large LD, from cell wall

1. Blastomyces 2. Coccidiodes 3. Histoplasma

List of deep fungal infections

1. Trichophyton 2. Microsporum 3. Epidermophyton

List of genera in dermatophytes

1. Blastomyces 2. Histoplasma 3. Coccidiodes 4. Sporothrix (mnemonic: body heat changes shape)

List of main dimorphic fungi

Probiotics

Live microbes applied to or ingested into the body for a beneficial effect

what do Amoebozoas have? what do they lack?

Lobe shaped pseudopodia NO shells

What is the treatment for Coccidioides?

Low risk patients with mild localized pulmonary disease may not need treatment. High risk patients with pulmonary disease or all patients with disseminated disease (defined clinically or by high CF titer) treated, usually with fluconazole.

What are dimorphic fungi?

MOLDS at ambient temperatures (e.g. 25C), forming reproductive spore structures. Spores aerosolized and infectious. Inhaled by host, grow as YEASTS at body temperature. Identification based on stains of tissues showing yeast forms, serologic tests to detect antigens or antibodies, and cultures at 25C growing mold forms. LAB HAZARD since will have mold which is the infectious form.

Fungi are divided in to what two categories

Macroscopic and Microscopic

Microsocpic fungi are unicellular or multicellular

Majority are unicellular but some are multicellular

Your roommate tells you that the maple syrup has bacterial growth. Without looking, you suspect the growth is actually a fungus. Why? A. Fungi can metabolize wood. B. Bacteria do not grow on sugar. C. Maple syrup has a high osmotic pressure. D. Fungi are usually aerobes.

Maple syrup has a high osmotic pressure

Protozoa Phyla

Mastigophora, Sarcodina, Ciliophora, Apicomplexa

______ is nuclear division of diploid cells that results in four haploid daughter nuclei. sexual reproduction

Meiosis

How do you treat meningitis due to Coccidioides?

Meningitis treated with intrathecal (in the subarachnoid space) amphotericin (some cases of cure) or lifelong high dose fluconazole, often following induction with IV amphotericin. AIDS patients need lifelong therapy probably even after immune reconstitution.

Steps of Koch's Postulate

Microrganism isolated, grown on a culture, inject into a healthy organism, Isolated again from newly infected organism, grown in pure culture, identified

What do you use to microscopically diagnose fungi?

Microscopic examination of scrapings or tissues. Fungi are Gram positive! More selective stains include: -KOH: breaks down host cells, easier to see fungi. -India Ink - for CSF cryptococcus. -Calcofluor - fluorescent dye. -Methenamine silver - silver taken up by fungi.

Eukaryoitc Cell Cytoskeleton

Microtubules and microfilaments

What is the treatment for blastomycosis? What is prevention?

Mild or localized disease treated with itraconazole. Severe disease treated with amphotericin. No specific means of prevention.

What is the treatment and prevention for Paracoccidioides?

Mild-moderate disease treated with itraconazole. Interestingly, trimethoprim-sulfa has activity, but tendency to relapse. Severe disease treated with amphotericin. No known means of prevention.

Curved septate hyphae and yeast (mnemonic: spaghetti and meatballs)

Morphology of Malassezia furfur

Dimorphic fungi

Morphology of all deep fungal infections

Septate hyphae with arthroconidia

Morphology of all dermatophytes

Dimorphic (hyphae with rossettes in environment, cigar-shaped yeast in tissue)

Morphology of sporothrix

Where Algae found

Most aquatic, some terrestial (moist soil)

Resolution (most never see a doctor)

Most common outcome of deep fungal infection

What are Protozoas Habitat?

Mostly found in water. Require moisture, fresh and marine water, soil, plants and animals Can (not likely) linve in extreme temps or pH

What is systemic candidiasis? How do you get it? Where do you see symptoms?

Mucocutaneous barriers breached in patients with surgery, burns, lines, antibiotics, immunosuppression, neutropenia, cancer (esp. hematologic) Candidemia may have wide dissemination. Chronic disseminated candidiasis, involves the liver and spleen after episodes of neutropenia. Often fatal condition. Any blood culture growing Candida must be treated as "real" rather than a contaminant.

How do you diagnose candidiasis?

Mucosal & cutaneous candidiasis diagnosed clinically and with KOH of scrapings. Invasive disease requires blood cultures and/or stains/cultures of tissues & fluids. Species identified by morphology of pseudohyphae on Corn Meal Agar (at room temperature) and selectivity of carbon source assimilation. !!!!Germ Tube Test- Candida albicans uniquely forms germ tubes, precursors of hyphae, when grown in serum at 37C.

What is Candida esophagitis?

Mucosal Candidiasis Candida esophagitis-Plaques & ulcers in patients with AIDS, cancer, immunosuppression. Organisms descend from mouth. Commonly thrush is a clue. Presents with dysphagia or odynophagia (pain with swallowing). Dx by endoscopy.

Ptyriasis (tinea versicoor)

Name of disease caused by Malassezia furfur

Tinea pedis (athlete's foot)

Name of disease involving fungal infection of the foot

Tinea cruris (jock's itch)

Name of disease involving fungal infection of the groin

Tinea unguium (onychomycosis)

Name of disease involving fungal infection of the nails

Tinea corporis

Name of disease involving ringworm of the body skin

Tinea barbae

Name of disease involving ringworm of the lower face

Tinea capitis

Name of disease involving ringworm of the scap

Visceral Larval Migrans

NeMac, TH2 differentiation

Also known as roundworm A. Cestodes B. Trematodes C. Nematoda D. Amebae

Nematoda

Cylindrical and tapered with complete digestive systems A. Cestodes B. Trematodes C. Nematoda D. Amebae

Nematoda

Enterobius Vermicularis A. Cestodes B. Trematodes C. Nematoda D. Amebae

Nematoda

Eukaryotic Cell Nucleus consist of

Nuclear Envelope, Nucleolus, Chromosomes

Subclinical Disease

No noticeable signs or symptoms (Hep A)

What symptoms do you see with AIDS patients with cryptococcosis?

Nodular, central umbilicated skin lesions in AIDS patients with cryptococcosis.

Describe disseminated Coccidioides.

Overall, <1% spread to skin, bones, meninges (granulomatous basilar meningitis) or other body sites. -The KEY is that are worried about meningitis. May be soon after exposure or late (reactivation similar to TB style). -Risk factors include altered CMI (e.g. AIDS, organ transplant) and pregnancy (altered immune function and trophic effects of E2, progesterone for cocci). Patients with dissemination typically have HIGH CF antibody titers.

What is the shape of budding yeast?

Ovoid shape.

what are the 4 classes of Protozoa?

Parabasala Alveolates Amoebozoa Euglenozoa

Describe Paracoccidioides brasiliensis.

Paracoccidioides brasiliensis-Dimorphic fungus with characteristic yeast form with large multiply budding cells with narrow attachments in tissue and 36C rich medium culture. Found in Central and South America. Probable soil source but not clear. Men>>Women (?Exposure). Worst problem in Brazil—death rate up to 1.5/1000.

what is a well known pond water ciliate?

Paramecium

Local Infection

Pathogens are limited to a small area of the body (abscess)

Trichomoniasis

Pear shaped, barbed tail

How does Algae aquire energy

Photoautotroph, uses sunlight for photosynth and CO2

What are the two types of Animal virus Attachment, Pentration, and Uncoating

Pinocytosis, Fusion

Dinoflag

Plankton, free floating, grooves for motility, some harmful to humans

Describe Pneumocystosis.

Pneumocystis jiroveci--Previously thought to be a protozoan; molecular studies indicate actually fungus. P. jiroveci now identified as the human pathogen with the more familiar P. carinii found only in rats. **Trophozoites and Cysts with thick walls and multiple nuclei. Little known until AIDS era--leading opportunistic infection in AIDS. Also seen in organ transplantation, lymphomas, other altered CMI.

Capsules

Prevent phagocytosis

How do you prevent getting Coccidioides?

Prevention: Avoidance of dusty environments in endemic areas in high-risk individuals.

What is the prevention for Aspergillosis?

Prevention: Role for prophylactic antifungal therapy in neutropenic patients. HEPA air filters in bone marrow transplant units.

Proteinaceous Infectious Particle

Prion

Chytridomycetes

Prmitive fungi (chytrids) Single cells or clusters, Don't form hyphae or yeast-like cells, Produce flagellated spores (zoospores)

Ecological Importance of Algae

Produces 50-80% of earth's oxygen, use CO2 to form carbs (lg molecules), food source for marine animals

Biosynthesis Stage

Production of phage DNA and proteins

How do you prevent and treat cryptococcosis?

Prophylactic antifungals rarely used (rx effective, avoid causing R Candida) Meningitis generally treated initially with amphotericin and 5FC, converted to fluconazole when CSF antigen titer drops substantially. Pulmonary disease may be treatable with fluconazole from the beginning. AIDS patients need long term treatment.

Cell wall

Protective barrier in all fungi

Exotoxin

Protein composition, Gram positive, from inside the cell, small LD

What is chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis?

Recurrent, severe mucosal/cutaneous candidiasis often w/ disfiguring lesions, starting in early childhood. Due to defects of CMI. May be associated with autoimmune endocrinopathies

Which algae produces Calcium Carbonate - helps form coral reefs

Red algae produces what natural substance and what does it do ?

Glucose polymer storage material, what algae

Red, Green have what type of storage material

Purpose of Fungal spores

Replication, Survival, Producing genetic variation, and Dissemination

Also known as aerial hyphae A. Vegatative hyphae B. Reproductive hyphea C. Conidium D. Mycelium

Reproductive hyphea

Stalk like filaments that stick up over the substrate A. Vegatative hyphae B. Reproductive hyphea C. Conidium D. Mycelium

Reproductive hyphea

What is the life cycle of molds?

Reproductive structure (spore) germinates. An elongated germ tube forms. Growth by apical extension, leading to formation of hyphae -> mycelia. Vegetative hyphae ~ roots. Aerial hyphae with reproductive structures.

All distinguish parasitic helminths EXCEPT A. They lack a digestive system B. They have a reduced nervous system C. They lack the means of motion D. Reproductive system is simple

Reproductive system is simple

Portals of Exit

Respiratory Tract, GI, Genirourinary, Skin, Blood

Leishmaniasis

Rodent, dog, human reservoir Sandfly transmitter

Part of skin flora

Route of transmission for Malassezia furfur

Traumatic implantation

Route of transmission for sporothrix

protozoan asexual reproduction within red blood & liver cells

Schizogony

What is the mechanism of action of polyenes?

Selectively bind to ergosterol in fungal cell membrane -> osmotic cell death. (Much less binding to cholesterol.)

What is the mechanism of action of Azoles?

Selectively block ergosterol synthesis by inhibiting demethylation of lanosterol. (Fungal P450 enzyme much more sensitive than animal.)

What is the mechanism of action of Terbinafine?

Selectively blocks ergosterol synthesis by inhibiting squalene epoxidase (not found in animals).

How are Helminths Classified?

Shape, Size, Degree of development organs, and Presence of hooks/suckers/or other special structures (determined by microscopic dissection of the adult,larvae,and eggs)

How Damage is Done to Host Cell

Siderophores, Direct, Toxins, Lysogenic Conversion, Cytopathic Effects

Describe cutaneous Candidiasis.

Similar to dermatophytes, but particular tendency to involve water-exposed or intertriginous areas esp. in obese patients, diabetics. Unique to cutaneous candidiasis and not seen in dermatophytes: Often painful, red, inflamed with vesicles/pustules. May have finger>toe nail involvement, often with coexistent paronychia, esp in dishwashers, etc.

Morphology of Algae

Single or multi-celled Eukaryotes (colonies/filamentous)

What immunologic and molecular diagnostics do we use for fungi?

Skin tests have limited role for verifying exposure to some fungi. Problematic if impaired CMI and cannot distinguish old from recent exposure. A positive skin test may be a good prognostic sign. -Don't use much anymore. Antibody serologies available for many fungi, of varying utility. Antibodies are not against the fungi, they are just a marker of immunity. No actual immune function. Antigen detection available and very helpful for Cryptococcus and Histo, now Cocci. Antigen better to use than Ab. Galactomannan (in cell wall) assays for Aspergillus and beta glucan (in cell wall) assays for other fungi hold promise. DNA probe, PCR technologies relatively undeveloped for fungal infection.

How do you diagnose Aspergillosis?

Smears of sputum, bronchoscopy specimens, lung biopsies showing characteristic hyphae (septate, acute angle hyphae). Cultures on fungal media at ROOM temperature; characteristic hyphae. Antibody tests helpful for Allergic Bronchopulmonary Aspergillosis, not for invasive disease. Antigen detection of cell wall galactomannan shows promise for early diagnosis of invasive disease.

Trichinella spiralis

Smoking/salting don't kill

What is another name for Paracoccidioidomycosis?

South American Blastomycosis.

Microsporum canis (will infect skin and hair)

Species of fungus transmitted from animals such as cats or dogs

Microsporum audoinii

Species of fungus transmitted from humans

Fungi; 3 types of asexual spores formation

Sporangiospores Chlamydospores Conidiospores a. Arthroconidia b. blastoconidia

2 types of Asexual spores

Sporangiospores and Conida

What is the pathogenesis of zygomycete?

Sporangiospores inhaled, organisms settle in nose or lungs. May be inoculated into skin. Generally no clinical disease without predisposing defects to immune system. Sporangiospores germinate, hyphae invade VESSELS causing tissue necrosis and dissemination.

Sexual spores form by doing all of the following EXCEPT: A. Two hyphae grow together and fuse B. Spores formed by fusion of male and female strains C. Spores formed by partitioning of hypha or forming special structures.

Spores formed by partitioning of hypha or forming special structures.

What is Sporothrix schenckii? Describe the symptoms when you get infected.

Sporothrix schenckii—Dimorphic fungus (Mold in environment, Yeast in tissue). Found on vegetation, esp. rose bushes and sphagnum moss. Will see with gardeners. Conidia inoculated into skin of upper extremity by trauma (esp. gardening). Ulcer develops into granulomatous nodule. -Classic lymphocutaneous spread with thickening of draining lymphatics & chain of subcutaneous nodules!!! Key finding on physical exam. May disseminate. May have primary pulmonary disease from inhalation. Some protective immunity- more limited disease in patients with multiple exposures. Budding yeasts may be found in tissue, along with asteroid bodies (yeasts are cigar shaped and surrounded by eosinophilic immune complexes).

Green Algae - two common types

Spyrogyra, Volvox types of what

India ink stain (but its only 50% sensitive, meaning it has false negatives, meaning it may tell you nothing is there when there actually is; use latex agglutination assay for most sensitivity)

Stain used for cryptococcus neorformans

Silver stain

Stain used for pneumocystis

Calcofluor or KOH

Stain used for skin scrapings

How do you diagnose blastomycosis? What serology is associated with it?

Stains of sputum, pus, urine, tissue-characteristic yeast forms, rarely hyphal forms. Culture-Mold at 30C (warmer than usual), conversion to yeast on rich medium at 37C. No good skin test. Serology-Some role for CF, ID, EIA antibody detection. Problems with cross reactivity with other fungi.

How do you diagnose Histoplasmosis?

Stains of tissue showing yeast cells in macrophages. This is class for Histoplasmosis. Will see in peripheral WBC. Culture of sputum, urine, skin lesions, blood, bone marrow. At 25C for mold, at 37C for yeast. Hyphae have macroconidia and microconidia. Like cocci, LAB HAZARD. Skin test used only for epidemiology, not individual diagnosis. May lead to false positive antibody tests.

In what ethnicities do we see more Coccidioides?

Striking racial/ethnic differences in rate of dissemination. Filipinos>African Americans>Native Americans >Hispanics >Asians>Caucasians.

Aseptate hypha

String of non separated hyphae

Pathology

Study of Disease

Mycology

Study of Fungi

A puncture wound allows spores or mycelial fragments to implant directly into the tissue beneath the skin A. Systemic Mycosis B. Subcutaneous Mycosis C. Cutaneous Mycosis D. Superficial Mycosis E. Oppertunistic Mycosis

Subcutaneous Mycosis

Sporothrix schenckii, which occurs in gardeners and farmers is a: A. Systemic Mycosis B. Subcutaneous Mycosis C. Cutaneous Mycosis D. Superficial Mycosis E. Oppertunistic Mycosis

Subcutaneous Mycosis

What is Chromomycosis and Phaeohyphomycosis?

Subcutaneous mycoses. Caused by pigmented soil molds (dematiaceous - pigmented mold) inoculated into skin. May have warty granulomatous lesions, cysts, or disseminated disease (especially in immunocompromised).

What is Mycetoma?

Subcutaneous mycoses. Mycetoma or Madura Foot-chronic draining sinuses with colored granules. Generally tropical, acquired by barefoot exposure to soil/vegetation.

What is the substance that a fungus grow on A. Conidium B. Mycelium C. Substrate D. Filamentous

Substrate

Subacute

Symptoms between Acute and Chronic

Acute Disease

Symptoms develop rapidly (Flu)

Dermatophytid

Synonym of ID reaction

Focal

Systemic Infection that began as a local (teeth, tonsils, sinuses)

Coccidioidomycosis, which occurs in the dessert and SW USA, cause respiratory infection and is a: A. Systemic Mycosis B. Subcutaneous Mycosis C. Cutaneous Mycosis D. Superficial Mycosis E. Oppertunistic Mycosis

Systemic Mycosis

Fungal infections deep within the body A. Systemic Mycosis B. Subcutaneous Mycosis C. Cutaneous Mycosis D. Superficial Mycosis E. Oppertunistic Mycosis

Systemic Mycosis

Fiddehead

The coiled young fronds of any varoius ferns

Mitosis

The process in cell division by which the nucleus divides, typically consisting of four stages, prophase, metaphase, anaphase, and telophase, and normally resulting in two new nuclei, each of which contains a complete copy of the parental chromosomes.

Meiosis

The process of cell division in sexually reproducing organisms that reduces the number of chromosomes in reproductive cells from diploid to haploid, leading to the production of gametes in animals and spores in plants.

Sporophyte

The spore-producing phase in the life cycle of a plant that exhibits alternation of generations.

Describe Dermatophytoses.

These are in the cutaneous layer. Also called "ringworm" or tinea (from Latin for worm) because of round lesions. -Rare among fungi, may have person-to-person and zoonotic spread.

What are Sporotrichosis?

These are subcutaneous mycoses.

Affects the feet A. Tinea capitis B. Tinea corporis C. Tinea cruris D. Tinea pedis E. Tinea unguium

Tinea pedis

What do Protozoa eat?

They are Heterotrophs, they eat bacteria, decaying organic matter, and other protozoa (Tissues of host)

Which of these answers is true for the trematodes? A. They live exclusively in the host's intestinal tract. B. They may have more than one intermediate host. C. They have long, flat, segmented bodies. D. They often lack reproductive systems. E. They are classified in the Phylum Nematoda

They may have more than one intermediate host

Cyst

Thick capsule, low metabolic rate, dormant resting stage (are endospore-like) (can be dispersed by wind)

Mildew

This is a diagram of A. Sacccharomyces cerevisiae B. Rhizopus nigricans C. Mildew D. Penicillium

Penicillium

This is a diagram of A. Sacccharomyces cerevisiae B. Rhizopus nigricans C. Mildew D. Penicillium

Rhizopus nigricans

This is a diagram of A. Sacccharomyces cerevisiae B. Rhizopus nigricans C. Mildew D. Penicillium

Sacccharomyces cerevisiae

This is a diagram of A. Sacccharomyces cerevisiae B. Rhizopus nigricans C. Mildew D. Penicillium

Smut fungi

This is a diagram of A. Smut fungi B. Rhizopus nigricans C. Mildew D. Penicillium

Arthrospore

This is a diagram of: A. Arthrospore B. Chlamydospore C. Conidiospore D. Planospores

Chlamydospore

This is a diagram of: A. Arthrospore B. Chlamydospore C. Conidiospore D. Planospores

Which Tinea is especially problematic in diabetic patients?

Tinea pedis a key risk factor for invasive bacterial infections in diabetics via disruption of normal skin barriers.

Affects the nails A. Tinea capitis B. Tinea corporis C. Tinea cruris D. Tinea pedis E. Tinea unguium

Tinea unguium

What is Thoracic mucormycosis?

Thoracic mucormycosis-similar to invasive pulmonary aspergillosis with pneumonia, pulmonary infarction, etc. Seen less in diabetics than in immunosuppressed. Other forms include cutaneous, GI, disseminated.

How can a plant get a virus

Through a wound (usually from an insect)

Affects the scalp A. Tinea capitis B. Tinea corporis C. Tinea cruris D. Tinea pedis E. Tinea unguium

Tinea capitis

Affects the torso A. Tinea capitis B. Tinea corporis C. Tinea cruris D. Tinea pedis E. Tinea unguium

Tinea corporis

Affects the groin A. Tinea capitis B. Tinea corporis C. Tinea cruris D. Tinea pedis E. Tinea unguium

Tinea cruris

Sepsis

Toxic inflammatory condition from the spread of microbes

1. Itraconazole 2. Amphotericin B

Treatment of alcoholic-rose-garden-sleeper disease

1. Itraconazole 2. Potassium iodide in milk

Treatment of cutaneous or lymphocutaneous sporothrichosis

1. Oral imidazoles 2. Griseofulvin

Treatment of painful dermatophytes

1. Topical imidazoles 2. Tolnaftate

Treatment of painless dermatophytes

what is a well-known opportunistic pathogenic parabasalid causes severe inflammation of the human vagina?

Trichomonas

What is the treatment and prevention of Pneumocystis?

Trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole is first line therapy, with adjunctive steroid therapy for patients with significant hypoxemia or elevated A-a gradient. Alternatives include pentamidine, atovaquone, trimethoprim-dapsone, clindamycin, primaquine, trimetrexate. Prevention-Prophylaxis with SMX/TMP for organ transplant patients and for HIV infected patients with declining CD4 counts. Antiretroviral therapy leading to immune reconstitution is best prevention in patients with HIV infection.

Protozoa Life Cycle

Trophozoite, Cyst, Encystment

True or False Members of a fungal phylum are characterized by a specific type of sexual spore

True

True or False Most plants benefit from symbiotic fungal partners

True

True or False The phylum Platyhelminthes contains the cestodes and trematodes

True

True/False Many Helminths are free livingin the soil and water.

True

euglenoids contain choroplasts that contain light absorbing pigments T or F?

True

1. Saprophytic 2. Parasitic

Two forms of fungi (in terms of food source)

Asexual spores form by doing all of the following EXCEPT: A. Two hyphae grow together and fuse B. One mold or fungus will divide an area C. Spores formed by partitioning of hypha or forming special structures. D. Spores are formed by budding

Two hyphae grow together and fuse

Zoospores

flagellated spores in chytrids

Saprophytic (it is not parasitic because superficial skin is not living tissue)

Type of heterotroph that infects the superficial skin

1. Dermatophytes

Types of fungi with arthroconidia morphology

1. Sporothrix

Types of fungi with conidia morphology

1. Sporothrix

Types of fungi with nonseptate hyphae morphology

1. Candida

Types of fungi with pseudohyphae morphology

1. Malassezia furfur (most of it) 2. Dermatophytes

Types of fungi with septate hyphae morphology

1. Coccidiodes

Types of fungi with spherules in endospores morphology

1. Sporothrix 2. Candida

Types of fungi with yeast morphology

What are the histological characteristics of Mucormycosis (properly Zygomycosis)?

Ubiquitous saprophytes in soil, plants. Common bread molds! Characterized by sporangia, sporangiospores! = TQ. In tissue, broad, nonseptate hyphae with right-angle branching.

Make sure you know the learning objectives.

Understand fungal structure and physiology including differences between fungi and animals. Understand mechanisms of action of antifungal agents. Understand fungal pathogenesis and host-organism interactions. Understand diagnostic tests available for fungal infections.

Make sure you know the learning objectives.

Understand the difference between superficial, cutaneous, and subcutaneous fungal infections and recognize typical clinical appearances. Understand the different presentations of candidal infections and the impact of host factors with implications for dx and rx. Understand the presentations of cryptococcal infection and the impact of host factors with implications for dx and rx.

Make sure you know the learning objectives.

Understand the geographical, epidemiologic, and host factors related to infection with the major endemic fungi Recognize the key diagnostic stages of the organisms Describe the lifecycle of dimorphic fungi Begin to understand considerations in treatment.

Protozoa

Unicellular chemoheterotroph which absorbs its foods and reproduces assexually or sexually

What are yeasts?

Unicellular fungi, reproduce by budding. May form pseudohyphae which are elongated buds.

Algae

Unicellular photoautotroph which recieves nutrients by diffusion

Ergosterol

Unique component of fungal membranes

Siderophores

Uses hosts Iron (Fe)

Uses for Fungi

Vaccines, Bread, Wine, Kills Termites, Cellulase (clothing, juice)

What does Coccidioidomycosis cause?

Valley Fever. Mnemonic: Vally girls like cock.

Arthropods that carry pathogenic microorganisms A. Vector B. Cestodes C. Nematoda D. Amebae

Vector

Filaments that look like roots A. Vegatative hyphae B. Reproductive hyphea C. Conidium D. Mycelium

Vegatative hyphae

Lysogenic Cycle

Viral DNA forms a prophage within the bacterias DNA remaining latent until it enters the lytic cycle

Infectious Plant RNA

Viroid

What are the virulence factors of Candida albicans?

Virulence factors: Adherence, proteases, phospholipases, yeast/hyphal transformation.

What is Candida Endophthalmitis?

WHen have cloudy vitreous humor due to candida infection in the eye.

this crop pathogen devastated the potato crop in Ireland during the mid-19th century, causing a famine that killed over 1 million people. What was this?

Water Mold called Phytophthora infestans

Giardia lamblia

Well contamination Hiker drinking bad water

Hyphae

Where is this spore forming A. conidium B. Hyphae C. Bud

C

Which one is Conidiospore?

C, Conidiospore

Which one is Penicillium?

B, Chlamydospore

Which one is Smut Fungi?

B

Which one is a Chlamydospore?

A, Blastospore

Which one is a Sacccharomyces cerevisiae?

A

Which one is a arthrospore?

A, Arthrospore

Which one is mildew?

A, Blastospore

Which one is yeast buds?

What is a Latent Infection

Will remain in host for a long period of time (comes and goes)

Pandemic Disease

Worldwide epidemic (AIDS)

What agar do you use to grow fungi?

YEASTS generally grow well on blood agar. MOLDS recovered better using media that inhibit bacterial growth such as Sabouraud's dextrose agar!!! -Dimorphic fungi grow as molds at 25C and yeasts at 37C. Rhizopus/zygomycete species from tissues grow poorly. Molds with aerial conidia processed under a hood to protect laboratory workers.

Are Algae are Eukaryotes? Photosynthetic?

YES. Algea are eukaryotic and photosynthetic organisms

How do you diagnose Paracoccidioidomycosis?

Yeast forms in fluids or tissues Culture with appropriate conversion to yeast form at 36C, rich medium Rising titer of comp fix or immunodiffusion antibody (helpful, correlate with severity of disease) Skin testing for epidemiology, not diagnosis

What are the clinical aspects of cryptococcosis? How do you get it? Where can it spread to? What are the symptoms?

Yeasts inhaled. Pulmonary infection usually asymptomatic but may have pneumonia or lung nodules. Dissemination to brain leading to meningoencephalitis with fever, headache, neurologic deficits, elevated CSF protein, decreased glucose, positive India Ink, positive cryptococcal antigen. May also go to skin, prostate. Most patients have altered CMI, esp. AIDS or transplantation. AIDS patients lack neurologic symptoms because have low threshold. Only see fever and headache.

Describe Cryptococcus neoformans. How do you ID it? What are the virulence factors?

Yeasts with narrow-based buds. Wide polysaccharide capsule allows identification with India Ink or latex agglutination detection of capsular antigen. Virulence factors include: -the capsule (antiphagocytic), -phenol oxidase enzyme (which scavenges catecholamines and produces melanin which protects against oxidant stress), -phospholipases.

Are all Helminths Eukaryotic?

Yes

Can Candida cause endocarditis?

Yes! Will see vegetations on valves, esp. mitral valve.

Are all Helminths Multicellular?

Yes, They are a multicellular animal with organs and organ systems (to some degree)

Algal fungi: A. Zygomycota B. Ascomycota C. Basidiomycota D. Deuteromycota

Zygomycota

Branched nonseptate hyphae: A. Zygomycota B. Ascomycota C. Basidiomycota D. Deuteromycota

Zygomycota

Bread molds and water molds: A. Zygomycota B. Ascomycota C. Basidiomycota D. Deuteromycota

Zygomycota

Contain the spores zoospores, aplanospores, oospores and zygospores. A. Zygomycota B. Ascomycota C. Basidiomycota D. Deuteromycota

Zygomycota

name the 4 classes of Fungi

Zygomycota Ascomycota Basidiomycota Deuteromycetes

Diplod

a cell containing two sets of chromosomes

Ciguatera is caused by A) a tick bite B) a dinoflagellate neurotoxin

a dinoflagellate neurotoxin

Which type of organism is a nematode? A) fungus B) a helminth.

a helminth

Gamete

a mature sexual reproductive cell having a single set of unpaired chromosomes

Sporangiophore

a plant or fungal structure that bears a sporangium or spores

Which type of organism is Toxoplasma gondii? A) a protozoan parasite B) a helminth

a protozoan parasite. Toxoplasma gondii is a protozoan parasite that can infect cats as well as humans

What other test (in addition to a CSF study) will be positive in this patient with AIDS, fever, and headache? a) Serum cryptococcal antigen b) Blood culture growing Streptococcus pneumoniae c) CSF culture with a mold growing best w/ olive oil d) Microscopy of skin scrapings showing dermatophyte

a) Serum cryptococcal antigen

A patient with diabetic ketoacidosis has necrosis of the palate and nasal mucosa. What is likely pathogen? a. Rhizopus species b. Aspergillus fumigatus c. Blastomyces dermatitidis d. Candida albicans

a. Rhizopus species Image shows ribbon hyphae with right angles. Big point is the necrosis of the palate and nasal mucosa.

The asci that occurs in the fruiting bodies are called

acsocarps

trophozoite

active live stage where microbe is moving around in you

the sac in ascomycetes in which the sexual spores are formed.

asci

Most fungi are aerobic or anerobic?

aerobic

a haploid thallus alternates with a diploid thallus what is this called?

alternation of generations

Leshmaniasis

amastigote

sarcodina

amoebas; move by psuedopods

Fungi that produce only asexual spores are called

anamorphic

Filariasis

anopheles/culex mosquitos

Phyllids

another name for Bryophytes

alveolates called ______ are all pathogens of animals

apicomplexans

sporozoa

apicomplexans; move only during one stage by cilia or flagela; produce spores

Eukaryotic Cell External

appendages-flaggella, cilia(prokaryotes do not have) Glycocalyx-capsules, slimes

Chytrids

aquatic and produce flagellated spores; they were the first fungi

Fungal spores ________. A. are as resistant to extreme environmental conditions as bacterial endospores are B. require moisture for survival C. are considered "reproductive" spores D. are released from the "parent" only after the parent dies E. include only sexual spores

are considered "reproductive" spores

how do euglenoids store food?

as a polysaccharide called paramylon

Why is amphotericin (relatively) safe to use in humans? a) Animals have no cell walls b) Less binding to cholesterol than ergosterol c) Animals lack cytosine deaminase d) Enzymes of cholesterol synthesis less inhibited than those of ergosterol synthesis

b) Less binding to cholesterol than ergosterol.

Lung biopsy of leukemic patient with persistent fever, neutropenia, lung cavity. What is most likely pathogen? a. Mycobacterium tuberculosis b. Aspergillus fumigatus c. Mucor species d. Candida albicans e. Pseudomonas aeruginosa

b. Aspergillus fumigatus Image associated with questions shows acute angle septate hyphae.

what do Cellular slime molds composed of myamoebae phagocytize?

bacteria and yeasts

Unicellular Algae reproduce sexually or asexually?

both

asexual reproduction in fungi

budding and asexual spores w/ diploid

How do fungi reproduce?

budding via asexual spores

chrysophytes of Golden Algae contain more orange-colored _______ than chlorophyll, which accounts for their golden coloring

carotene

what do alveolates have?

cavities called alveoli

What is special about Agar

comes from red algae, bacteria cannot metabolize it

what does the name of the group apicomplexans refer to?

complex (group) of special organelles that infect at the apex

Paragonimiasis

crab, crayfish

Name the most likely pathogen that forms nodules along lymph drainage tracts in arms: a) Cryptococcus neoformans b) Candida albicans c) Malassezia furfur d) Sporothrix schenckii e) Trychophyton rubrum

d) Sporothrix schenckii

Which statement about dimorphic fungi is incorrect? a) Molds at ambient temperature b) Yeasts at body temperature c) Molds are contagious form d) Yeasts are contagious form e) None of the above

d) Yeasts are contagious form. This is incorrect. The molds are contagious.

Lung biopsy from a resident of Fresno with fever and pulmonary infiltrates. What is the likely pathogen? a. Histoplasma capsulatum b. Candida albicans c. Sporothrix schenckii d. Coccidioides immitis e. Cryptococcus gattii

d. Coccidioides immitis. In Fresno would expect Vally Fever. The image associated with this question is of a spherules filled with endospores.

A renal transplant patient from Kentucky with overwhelming sepsis. What is the most likely organism in the WBC? a. Blastomyces dermatidis b. Paracoccidioides brasiliensis c. Coccidioides immitis d. Histoplasma capsulatum

d. Histoplasma capsulatum.

what do fungi decompose and recycle?

dead organisms; recycle nutrients

Water molds ______ dead animals and return _______ to the environment

decompose nutrients

Loasis

deer fly

Photic zone

depth with sufficient sunlight for photosynthesis

Fungi that infect only the epidermis, hair, and nails are A) dermatophytes B) yeasts

dermatophytes. Dermatophytes secrete keratinase, which digests keratin found in hair, nails, and skin

fungi having no known sexual stage are called

deuteromycetes

2 haploid nuclei, forming new spores (referring to sexual reproduction in fungus)

dikaryon

two forms of growth

dimorphic

fungi that can grow as a mold or a yeast are called

dimorphic fungi-(meaning two)

Red tide" is caused by a proliferation of __________. A. red algae B. diatoms C. green algae D. dinoflagellates

dinoflagellates

unicellular algae; make up most freshwater and marine plankton responsible for red tides; bioluminescent

dinoflagellates

what do Amoebozoas cause?

disease in brains of humans and animals that swim in water containing them

mastigophora

flagellates; protozoa that moves by flagella; won't see in lab they are smallest

platyhelminthes

flatworms (tapelike)

You are an epidemiologist studying an emerging disease reported over the past 3 years in Wisconsin, Minnesota, and Michigan. You have noticed a seasonal pattern of disease, with new cases appearing in late April through September and peaking in July. No new cases appear during late fall or the winter months. This pattern is suggestive of ________. A. disease caused by a pathogenic algae B. disease caused by a parasitic protozoa C. disease caused by a temperature-sensitive bacterium D. disease transmission by an arthropod vector such as a mosquito or tick E. disease caused by a temperature-sensitive virus

disease transmission by an arthropod vector such as a mosquito or tick

septate

divided into intividual cells of the mycelium

what domain

domain Eukarya

Which of these is a neurotoxin produced by diatoms? A) domoic acid B) carrageenan

domoic acid. Domoic acid causes memory loss and diarrhea when ingested

saprobes

eat dead organisms

heterotropic

eat other organisms

Lichens are organisms that are important how?

economically and environmentally

Roundworms (nematodes)

elongated, cylindrical, unsegmented body

what is a group of euglenozoa called?

euglenoids

True or False Algin is a neurotoxin produced by some dinoflagellates

false

yeasts get energy from

fermentation

Trematodes are also known as .

flukes

trematoda

flukes; type of flatworm

leaflike lichens that grow free from the substrate

foliose

Ascomycetes include most of the fungi that spoil what?

food

Which of the following is not involved in the production of sexual spores in fungi? A. nuclear fusion B. nuclear migration C. fragmentation D. contact between two fungi E. meiosis

fragmentation

mushrooms small visible extensions are called what?

fruiting bodies

cillica cell wall of a Diatom is called

frustules

lichen shape that is erect or hanging cylinder-like

fruticose

what are the 3 shapes of lichen?

fruticose crustose foliose

30% of Fungi produce mycoses. What is mycoses?

fungal diseases of plants animals and humans

A new soil microorganism has been described. On some growth media, it forms colonies of unicellular organisms; but under certain conditions it forms long, multicellular filaments and spores. The cells have nuclei, and their cell walls are composed of chitin. To which of the following groups does this new organism belong? A. bacteria B. fungi C. archaea D. algae E. protozoa

fungi

Basidiomycota are also known as

fungi, mushrooms

appendage of a parasitic fungus that penetrates host's tissue to withdraw nutrients

haustoria

Haploid

having a single set of chromosomes

anchor seaweed bodies to rocks

holdfasts

Rhizomes

horizontal stems that grow underground, produced by many plants.

reproduce asexually only, by binary fission or schizogony; few are sexual

how do protozoa reproduce?

Reservoirs of Infection

human, animal, non living

branching, threadlike LONG FILAMENTS tubes that make up the bodies of multicellular fungi

hyphae

long, branched tubular filaments that make up body (thallus) of molds or fleshy fungi

hyphae

Noncommunicable Disease

i.e. Tetnus, not transmitted from one host to another

how do Sporangiospores form?

inside a sac called a sporangium

In the life cycle of Toxoplasma gondii, humans can serve as the __________. A. intermediate host B. reservoir C. definitive host D. both the definitive host and the intermediate host

intermediate host

what kingdom

kingdom Protista (also Protozoa)

Locomotor Appendages

locate nutrients migrate to positive stimuli get away from negative stimuli common in protozoa, algae, some fungal/animal cells requires use of energy

Paragonimiasis

lung fluke

Which is transmitted by the Anopheles mosquito? A) malaria B) West Nile virus

malaria

Which of the following diseases is NOT transmitted to humans by an arachnid vector? A. Lyme disease B. Rocky Mountain spotted fever C. babesiosis D. malaria

malaria

mycellium

mass of hyphae

intermediate host

microbe only grows or increases in size

The following stages occur during the life cycle of a helminth. Which hatches from the egg? A. metacercaria B. miracidium C. cercaria D. redia

miracidium

what do Parabasala lack?

mitochondria

A nucleus that has replicated its DNA divides via a process called , _______

mitosis

Zygomycetes Asexual Spores

mostly sporangiospores; some conidia

Apicomplexa

motility is absent except during sexual reproduction, Asexual and sexual reproduction based on species, parasitic must be inside

Zygomycota

non-septate hyphae, form zygospores. ex. common bread mold

mold/mildew

multicellular

mushrooms

multicellular

Plasmodial slime molds are composed of _________ ______ of _______

multinucleate filaments of cytoplasm.

In fungi, what is a mass of hyphae called?

mycelium

The filaments of molds and fleshy fungi are referred to as .

mycelium

hyphae of a mold that intertwines into a tangled mass

mycelium

what is study of fungi?

mycology

fungal diseases are called

mycoses

What is another name for a fungal disease?

mycosis

Cellular slime molds are composed of what?

myxamoebae (amobea like structures)

Phaeophyta (brown)

name the brown algae

what are lichens used for ?

nitrogen, food for animals/ humans, dyes, clothing, perfume, medicine and to monitor air quality

A reproductive structure in which new cells are produced asexually. A. proglottids B. cytostome C. scolex D. oocyst

oocyst

Saprobes

organisms that obtain food from decaying organic matter

Most fungi are resistant to A. Low moisture B. High salt concentrations C. osmotic pressure D. sugars

osmotic pressure

Algae are aquatic and live in what zone?

photic zone (fresh & salt water)

the characteristics of euglenoids are __________,_________ and _________

photoautotrophic, unicellular, chloroplasts

Algae, like plants use _________

photosenthesis

study of algae is called

phycology

The study of algae is called ________

phycology.

Protozoans are critical members of this free-living drifting organism, that forms the basis of the aquatic food chain; name this protozoan organism

plankton

What is the gas-filled bladder that helps algae float in the water called?

pneumatocyst

buoyes that are gas-filled bulbs of seaweeds/algae

pneumocysts

Trichinella spiralis, Taenia solium

pork

What is algae role in environment

produce organic molecules, provide 50-80% earth Oxygen, start of food chain, build coral reefs,

The body of the tapeworm is called A. proglottids B. cytostome C. scolex D. oocyst

proglottids

Taxonomists continue to revise and refine the classification of ______ based on 18S rRNA nucleotide sequencing and features made visible by electron microscopy.

protozoa

Which of the following eukaryotic microorganisms are always unicellular? A. algae B. lichens C. fungi D. protozoa

protozoa

chemoheterotrophic: obtaining nutrients by phagocytizing bacteria, decaying organic matter, other protozoa, or the tissues of a host; a few protozoa absorb nutrients from the surrounding water.

protozoa nutrition

Entamoeba histolytica belongs to which group? A) helminths B) protozoa

protozoa. This protozoan is the cause of amoebic dysentery

study of protozoa is called

protozoology

Trypanosomiasis (Chagas Disease)

reduvlid bug

what is zygosporangia ?

rough-walled sexual structures of the fungi zygomyocota

Yeast

round, oval shape (similar to bacteria, but bigger), form buds which forms separate cells

nematoda

roundworms

Ascomycota include what?

sac fungi, molds & yeasts

Ascus

saclike structure in which ascospores are formed through sexual reproduction of ascomycetes

Organism that obtain food from dead organisms, all fungi are this

saprobes

Organisms that obtain food from decaying organic matter

saprobes

Zygomycota are mostly________

saprobes

The head of a tapeworm is called the A. proglottids B. cytostome C. scolex D. oocyst

scolex

what do Euglenoids have that helps maintain shape?

semi-rigid, proteinaceous, helical (spiral) shaped pellicle

crosswalls of molds

septa

Onchocerciasis

simulian black fly

What do Parabasalas have?

single nucleus and a parabasal body (golgi-like)

the thalli (bodies) of yeasts are ________, ________ and are composed of a ________ ________

small, globular, single cell

bits of lichen dispersed by small animals, wind or rain

soredia

Sporangium

spore capsule in which haploid spores are produced by meiosis

cyst

spore or seedlike dormant stage, usually found in digestive tract

What reproductive structure do fungi form?

spores

how does the fungus of a lichen reproduce?

spores that capture algae

the stem-like portion of seaweed algae

stipe

Fungi important research tools for what?

study of metabolism, growth, and development

Schistosomiasis

swimmer's itch

Which of the following is a fungal infection that spreads throughout the body? A. cutaneous mycosis B. athlete's foot C. superficial mycosis D. systemic mycosis

systemic mycosis

cestoda

tapeworms; type of flatworm

body of a mold or fleshy fungus

thallus

what is the vegetative (non-reproductive) body of a fungus called?

thallus

Hyphae

the branching, threadlike tubes that make up the bodies of Multicellular fungi

Which type of host is an organism that harbors the adult, sexually mature form of a parasite? A) the definitive host B) the intermediate host.

the definitive host. The definitive host harbors the sexually mature form of a parasite and the intermediate host is the host in which the parasite undergoes asexual reproduction

Gametophyte

the gamete-producing individual or phase in the life cycle of a plant having alternation of generations

Which of the following best describes a definitive host? A. the host in which an organism spends most of its life B. the host in which the organisms undergoes sexual reproduction C. the host in which the eggs hatch D. the host in which the organism undergoes asexual reproduction

the host in which the organisms undergoes sexual reproduction

Trophozoite

the motile feeding stage of a protozoa

You observe large (> 10 μm) oval cells in a sputum sample from a patient. Your culture of the sample reveals fuzzy filamentous colonies. You conclude that ________. A. the patient has a protozoan infection B. the patient has an infection with unusual algae C. the patient has an infection caused by a dimorphic fungus D. the patient has a yeast infection E. you contaminated the sample

the patient has an infection caused by a dimorphic fungus

Dissemination

the property of being diffused or dispersed

Capsule

the spore-producing organ of mosses and liverworts

All of these answers are true of yeasts except ________. A. some reproduce by budding B. they are capable of facultative anaerobic growth C. they produce colonies that are similar to bacterial colonies. D. some are used to produce ethanol in wine and beer making E. they always cause disease

they always cause disease

All of the following answers are true of the fungi except ________. A. they can grow in high concentrations of sugars and salts B. they are capable of metabolizing complex carbohydrates found in newspaper and wood C. diseases caused by fungi are called mycoses D. identification of fungi usually involves examination of spore types E. they are strict aerobes

they are strict aerobes

What is special about Carageenan

thickener, moisture-preserver

A cercaria is a larva of a __________. A. nematode B. protozoan C. cestode D. trematode

trematode

All free-living aquatic and pathogenic protozoa exist as a motile feeding stage called a ______________

trophozoite

motile feeding stage of a protozoan

trophozoite

True or False Trichinellosis can be transmitted by eating contaminated pork

true

Dracunculiasis

water fleas/copepods

final host

where the host reproduces

What determines where algae live

where wavelengths can be absorbed (determined by chlor & access pigments) is determinate for what

Trichuris trichura

whipworm disease

Unicellular, nonfilamentous fungi are known as ________. A. yeasts B. fleshy fungi C. molds D. mushrooms E. algae

yeasts

do fungi have cell walls?

yes

Fungi in the division Zygomycota are coencentric molds, what are these molds called?

zygomycetes

what is the distinctive feature of a zygomycetes?

zygosporangia

fertilized egg, diploid (2 sets of chromo's) cell formed from a gamete

zygote


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