Mycology - Scanlan

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What hyline molds form clusters from conidiophores?

- Acremonium - Tusarium - Gliocladium - Trichoderma spp

What are 3 types of invasive rhinosinusitis?

- Acute necrotizing - Chronic invasive - Granulomatous invasive

What is the role of the laboratorian?

- Advise physician about specimen collection - Culture and identify - Critical for correct treatment

Describe a non-selective culture media

- Brain-heart infusion agar (BHI) w/wo sabouraud's dextrose agar (SABHI), potato flake agar - Add cycloheximide and chloramphenicol - Selective recovery or dimorphic molds

Describe the morphology and microscopic details of Aspergillus flavus

- Granular to wooly - Shades of yellow, yellow-green, or yellow-brown - "Daisy-petal like" arrangement of chains of conidia - Single of double row of phialides cover entire spherical vesicle - Conidiophore is long (500-800um): distinct roughening of the wall near the vesicle - Conidia have a smooth spherical shape with yellow-brown pigmentation

Describe the morphology and microscopic details of Aspergillus terreus

- Granular, radially rugose (wrinkled or creased) - Cinnamon colored, brown, or orange-brown - Similar to A. fumigatus - Sporulation from top half of club shaped vesicle - Smaller and phialides are longer with a double row (hard to see double row) - Long chains of smooth spherical conidia - Key feature: Tease mount show mycelium with smooth spherical microconidia (attached laterally from vegetative hyphae)

Who are risks for hyline mold and hyalophomycosis infections?

- Immunocompromised - Bone marrow and organ transplant patients - Hematologic malignancies - Nosocomial infections in hospitals

What is a septate?

- Individuals cells separated by transverse walls called septate

Explain the clinical correlation of Allergic Bronchopulmonary Aspergillus

- Inflammation, eosinophils, Charcot-Layden crystals - Increase in serum levels of IgG and IgE to Aspergillus - Most common A. flavus and A. fumigatus

How is an infection contracted by hyaline molds?

- Inhalation of spore contaminated dust (sinusitis or bronchopulmonary disease)

Explain the clinical correlation of Disseminated Aspergillosis

- Invades all tissues and CNS - High mortality rate 94% in bone marrow transplants with treatment

What is a mycelium?

- Mat of growth

What are filamentous mycelium?

- Molds

Describe the Absidia species

- More delicate than Rhizoids - Internodal (originating from hyphae between the conidiophores) - Sporangiophores may branch - Funnel like structure of terminal conidiophore (apophysis)

What are the steps included in the Microslide technique?

- Mostly used to create permanent slides - Grow fungus in plug or cornmeal or potato dextrose agar with cover slip on top - Lactophenol cotton blue stain the cover slip after growth - Preserve slide with clear nail polish around cover slip

Describe what a mold looks like

- Multicellular - Cotton-like, velvet-like, wooly, pigmentation, granular - Hyphae 2-10um in diameter - Spores

What is a arial mycelium (reproductive mycelium)?

- Mycelium that projects from the substate - Contains spores of fruiting bodies

Describe selective culture media

- Mycosel/mycobiotic agar (primary recovery low dermatophytes) - BHI with penicillin, streptomycin, gentamicin, or chlorampheicol (inhibits bacteria)

Describe the Mucor species

- Other species ruled out before this one - No rhizoids - Branched or unbranched sporangiophores - Ends of sporangiophores are slightly bulbous columella extending with a spherical smooth walled sporangium - Sporangiophores are spherical or ellipsoid, hyaline or yellow brown pigmented

What hyline molds form chains from phialides?

- Penicillium - Paecilomyces - Scopulariopsis spp.

Describe how the stains look for the Aspergillus spp.

- Poorly in H&E stains - Well outlined in PAS and GMS stains

Describe Chlamydoconcidia

- Pre-existing cells in the hyphae become thickened or enlarged - Found within (intercalary), along the side (sessile) or at the tip (terminal) of the hyphae

Histopathology Infectious of Zygomycetes

- Ribbon-like broad Aseptate hyphae (hyphae range from 3-25um in width and nonparallel walls) - Often break into small fragments - Poor staining (PAS and GMS) - Purulent (contains neutrophils along with hyphae) - Can form fungus balls in body cavities - Treatment includes Amphotericin B and surgical debridement

Secondary workup on selective media for Aspergillus species

- Sabouraud's dextrose agar

Describe Superficial Fungal Infections

- Skin infections usually located in a specific infection site

Where are Zygomyces species found?

- Soil - Dung - Vegetative matter

What are some general types of reproduction?

- Vegetative sporulation - Aerial sporulation - Sexual sporulation

Describe Opportunistic Fungal Infections

- "Nonpathogenic fungi" - Usually infections as a result of other condition (HIV, IV drug use, immunosuppressed, and prosthetic devices)

What is a vegetative mycelium?

- "roots" mycelium extending into the media

How long do you incubate the fungal sample before discarding as negative?

- 30 days because colonies sometimes grow on contaminants

What temperature is required to culture fungi?

- 30 degrees Celsius

Explain the clinical correlation of Invasive pulmonary Aspergillosis

- Almost exclusively in immunocompromised - Presents as pneumonia (cough, fever, signs of respiratory distress) - Invades blood vessels and can disseminate

What is a Dimorphic fungi?

- Alternate between mold and yeast form - Based on environmental conditions - Temperature, CO2, nutrients (Susceptible to change)

Describe Arthroconidia

- Are formed from preexisting cells in the hyphae, which become thickened and enlarged - Conidia are rebased by lysis of adjacent cells

What are the majority of Aspergillus infections?

- Aspergillus fumigatus - Aspergillus flavis (serious) - Aspergillus niger - Aspergillus terreus

What species of fungi does hyaline molds and hyalohyphomycosis include?

- Aspergillus species and aspergillosis

What are 3 types of vegetative reproduction?

- Blastoconidia - Chlamydoconidia (Chlamydospores) - Arthroconidia

What morphological classifications do dimorphic fungi have?

- Blastomycosis - Coccidioidomycosis - Histoplasmosis - Sporotrichosis - Paracoccidioidomycosis - Phaeohyphomycosis

Describe the morphology and microscopic details of Aspergillus fumigatus

- Blue-green, green-gray, or green-brown pigmentation -Single row of phialides over the top of a clubbed shaped vesicle - Conidia are spherical, smooth, and arranged in long chains (may bend inward and present in a yellow-green or green pigment) - Conidiophores derived from a foot cell

Describe Blastoconidia

- Budding forms produced by yeast

What morphological classifications do yeast have?

- Candida species - Cryptococcus - Others

Describe the thick walls of fungi

- Chitin, mannans, sometimes cellulose - Allow absorption of specialized dye used in identification

What class is an ascospore in?

- Class Ascomycetes

What is cleistothecium?

- Closed bag-like structure containing smaller bag-like structures called asci - Smallest component of an ascus

Describe the fungus balls of Aspergillus spp.

- Colony growing in preexisting cavity such as nasal sinus, or lung cyst - Amorphous hyphae poorly stained - Well formed chains of conidia may be seen in cavities exposed to air

Describe Phialides

- Conidia producing segments on metulae

Describe Metulea

- Conidiaphore secondary segments

Describe Asci

- Contains four ascospores

Describe the morphology and microscopic details of Aspergillus niger

- Covered by dense aggregate of jet-black conidia - Peppered effect - Reverse of colony is buff or yellow grey in color - Profuse sporulation with dense aggregates of jet-black conidia covering the surface of the vesicle - Mature conidia become roughened (echinulate) - "Dandelion-Like"

What do construction zones do to hyline molds?

- Disrupt spores - Contaminate air filters

Describe the Circinella species

- Distinctive background curve of the sporangiophore - Terminate in globose sporangium (brown staining sporangiospores - No rhizoids

What additional tests can be performed and what do they do?

- ELISA - Sandwich ELISA - Detects circulating galactomannan (GM) - Low cost with rapid results - Useful in high risk patients - Less invasive - PCR - Used to validate patients and controls with invasive pulmonary Aspergillus

What does Basipedal condition mean?

- Each new conidium formed from the tip of the phialide pushing the other conidia ahead of it; older conidia are larger and more deeply staining

What is a blastoconidia?

- Elongation of budding yeast cells, sausage like constrictions

Describe the basics of mycology

- Eukaryotic - Thick cell walls - Single cell fungus - Filamentous mycelium - Reproduction by spores asexually or sexually

Describe the appearance of Zygomyces species and Zygomycosis

- Fast growing - 2-3 days usually - Wooly - Extends boarder to boarder of plate "lid lifter" - Broad - Irregular width - Ribbon-like - Aseptate hyphae - Sporangia

Describe characteristics of Hyalohyphomycetes

- Filamentous hyline molds - Grow in 3-5 days - Pale or pastel surface colors - Typically cover entire plate with outer margin (except Gliocladium and Trichoderma (they form a green or yellow lawn) - Appear granular - Opportunistic fungal infections (uncommon agents: Fusarium, Acremonium, and others)

Describe Sporangia

- Fruiting bodies forming closed sacs containing sporangiospores

What is a Hypha, Hypae (plural)

- Fundamental unit consisting of threadlike structure

What are 2 types of non-invasive rhinosinusitis?

- Fungal ball - Allergic fungal

What is an Oospore?

- Fusion from two different cells - Often from different hyphae

What is a zygospore?

- Fusion of morphologically identical cells - Often from same hyphae (homothalic) - Zygomycetes

Describe the morphology and microscopic details of Penicillium spp.

- Granular - Various shades of green - Sometimes yellow or yellow-brown - Branching of conidiophores - Primary medullae and secondary phialides - Tips are chains of conidia producing a Penicillus (brush) structure - Phialides are blunt and box-like - Conidia are spherical, evenly stained, and are acropetal (acropetal-identical conidia produced in sequence)

Describe the Cunninghamella species

- Has sporangiola (spherical spores from a large globose columella, no encasement in sporangium, and is attached by a tiny hair-like denticle)

Describe Deep-seated or systemic Fungal infections

- Highly virulent, invades deep tissues and can disseminate throughout the body

Describe the morphology of Aspergillus spp.

- Hyline, septate, parallel walls 3-6 um in diameter - Regular dichotomous branching at 45 degree angles

Pathogenicity of Zygomyces species

- Hyphae invasion of blood vessel walls - Dissemination of mycotic thrombi and metastatic foci in many organs

Describe Conidiophore

- Hyphae segment that supports a conidia-bearing fruiting head

Describe Sporangiophore

- Hyphae segment that supports a sporangium

Who is at risk for fungal infections?

- Immunocompromised - Transplant patients - Diabetics with neuropathy - Low PMN count - Systemic lupus erythematous (SLE) collagen disorders - Dysgammaglobulinemia - Alcohol and IV drug abuse - Steroids (suppress immune system), cytotoxic agents, prolonged antibiotic therapy - Work place exposure-animals and mold spores

How do you prepare a Transparency tape "cellophane tape"?

- Press cellophane tape gentle but firmly to surface to the colony - Press one slide of the tape to slide with drop of lactophenol cotton blue - Stretch tape across slide lowering it into the stain - Pull taught and affix other side of tape avoiding air bubbles - Might be difficult to use 100x oil emersion

Describe the Rhizopus species

- Production of distinct root-like rhizoids - Nodal (derived from hyphae immediately adjacent to sporangiophores) - Umbrella-like collapse of post mature sporangium

What can be seen in sputum samples that contain Aspergillus spp.

- Provisional diagnosis of Aspergillus - Contain various white cells with eosinophilia and hyphal fragments - Typical 45 degree branching hyphal fragments - Charcot - Leyden crystals elongated double pyramids formed from eosinophils

Describe the colony morphology of Aspergillus

- Rapid growth (3-5 days) - Distinct outer margin with white apron at advancing area of growth - Early colonies have cottony appearance later become sugary or granular

Describe the morphology and microscopic details of Aspergillus nidulans and Aspergillus glaucus

- Rarely encountered in clinical laboratories - Produces sexual (telomorphic) reproductive structures (cleistothecia and ascospores) - White, gray-white, cottony or granular and may have radial rugae - Dark stippling effect - Cleistothecia ("burnt nuts" appearance, dark soccer ball and thin walled spherical hyline "Hulle" cells

What is the role of a Primary care physician?

- Recognize sign and symptoms of fungal infection - Collect specimens and order - Treat patient based on identification

How do you prepare a Tease mount?

- Remove part of colony - Mount in drop of lactophenol aniline (cotton) blue - Tease apart colony (dissecting needle) and overlay with cover slip apply gentle pressure to disperse - Examine at 10x then try 40x or 100x

What is sexual sporulation?

- Requires the merging and recombination of two specialized fertile cells

What are 6 important genera of Zygomyces?

- Rhizopus spp. - Absidia spp. - Syncephalastrum spp. - Circinella spp. - Cunninghamella spp. - Mucor spp.

What hyline molds are borne singly and directly from the hyphae?

- Scedosporium - Chrysosporium - Sepedonium - Beauveria spp

Describe a Teleomorph

- Sexual reproductive form of a fungus; "perfect" fungus (known sexual spore)

Describe the Syncephalastrum species

- Shape and arrangement of sporangia differ - Merosporangia are cylindrical and arranged like "daisy petals" around a small spherical columella - Examine hyphae and colony morphology to not confuse this with Aspergillus flavus

Describe the morphology and microscopic details of Paecilomyces spp.

- Similar to Penicillium spp - Lighter pastel in color - Yellow-brown and brown variants are more frequently encountered - Granular surface - Tips of phialides are long and tapered terminating in a point - Conidia are oval to elliptical, irregular size, and uneven in staining - Basipedal condition

Describe what a yeast looks like

- Single cells - Resemble bacteria usually pasty like colonies - Oval to round - Budding cells

Describe the tissue of the Aspergillus spp.

- Sometimes purulent first changing to granulomatous (often no cellular response) - Sometimes produce oxalic acids (deposits of birefringent crystals (calcium oxalate))

How do we collect specimen and transport it?

- Specimen processing includes aspirated material or tissue biopsy recommended and its generally not swabs - Portion of the specimen is moved to a fungal culture media - Direct wet mounts or smears may provide presumptive diagnosis and may aid in the selection of appropriate culture media

What are 5 types of aerial reproduction

- Sporangia - Sporangiophore - Conidiophore - Metulae - Phialides

What are Fungas Ball infections?

- Tangled mass of hyphae cavities

Describe some general microscopic features of Aspergillus

- Uniform 4-6 um in diameter hyaline, septate hyphae with parallel walls - 45 degree angle dichotomous branching - Foot cell (base of origin of the conidiophore) - Conidiophores terminate in a swollen vesicle with uniseriate or two biseriate rows of phialides - Contain chains of pigmented conidia - Telomorphic cleistothecia containing ascospores also differentiate some species

Where are sites of infection of Zygomyces species?

- Upper respiratory infection (Inhalation of spores) - Primary gastrointestinal disease (ingestion of contaminated food) - Direct inoculation of skin and mucous membranes (inoculation of broken areas of skin)

How can we prevent dehydration of the fungal sample?

- Use oxygen permeable tape - Use breathable bags - Dedicated incubator with pan of sterile water

Identify signs of a fungal infection

- Vague or atypical symptoms - Low grade fever, night sweats, weight loss, fatigue, cough, and chest pain - Systemic disease usually begin with mucocutaneous lesions (ulcerative lesions of the intestine, larynx, pharynx, genitals, and tongue & pustular lesions of the skin or granulomas of the oral cavity) - Nonspecific findings: Accelerated SED rate, increase in C reactive protein, high gamma-globulin or elevation of neutrophils and monocytes

Describe a Anamorph

- Various asexual forms or structures produce by an "imperfect" fungus (no sexual spore known)

How do fungi asexually and sexually reproduce?

- Vegetative mycelium (arthrospores, chlamydospores, blastospores) - Aerial fruiting bodies (conidia)

How do we diagnose fungal infections?

- Visual examination of colony morphology - Microscopic observations in direct mount (typically just genus) - Biochemical tests - Genera and species differentiation (moving to nucleic acid probes)

Where are hyaline molds and hyalophomycosis located?

- Widely distributed in nature - Soil - Decaying vegetation - Variety of organic matter

What is a aseptate?

- Without walls between cells

What are single cell fungus?

- Yeast

What morphological classifications do molds have?

- Zygomyces - Hyaline molds - Hyalohyphomycetes - Dermatophytes

Can you use tubes or plates?

YES! - Consider space - Easier for transport - But tougher to get direct preps and test


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