Fungi Flashcards

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1
Q

What are the three ways in which fungi can be classified?

A

Unicellular (yeast)
Filamentous (mould)
Dimorphic (can switch between the above two forms)

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2
Q

List some features of unicellular fungi

A

Yeasts are facultative anaerobes, asexual reproduction (budding), they can produce colonies on agar (commonly confused for bacteria but their colonies are larger), mainly invade host via the respiratory epithelium

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3
Q

List some features of Filamentous fungi

A

Aerobes
Asexual reproduction (conidia - spores)
Produce mycelia on agar
Have hypha (long multicellular filaments)

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4
Q

List the types of fungi in descending virulence

A

Dimorphic fungi (filamentous in environment and yeast form when infect us)
Dermatophytes (ringworm grows where kerratin is - hair and skin. Heal from the inside out)
Agents of subcutaneous myocytes ( low grade infections)
Opportunists
Toxic fungi (toxins diffuse through bread or tomato)

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5
Q

What do dermatophytes cause

A

Tinea

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6
Q

What type of sample would you collect for investigation of Dermatophytes?

A

Skin scraping

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7
Q

What are the three genera of Dermatophytes?

A

Microsporum
Trichophyton
Epidermophyton

Each has preferences for different tissues

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8
Q

Why can humans handle a large amount of fungi but only a small amount of bacteria (before we get very sick)

A

Fungi do not have PAMPS and do not stimulate the immune system efficiently

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9
Q

List some examples of subcutaneous mycoses

A

Mycetoma (fungi + tumor) can have a bacterial cause of a fungal cause (eumycetoma). This is significant because the Rx is different for each cause - NO OVERLAP

Chromoblastomycosis

Phaeohyphomycosis`

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10
Q

What are some yeast examples of Opportunistic mycoses?

A
  1. Candidiasis: can be mucocutaneous, chronic mucocutaneous(in ppl with immunodeficiencies where they cannot clear infections) or systemic (septicaemia and death in neonates).
  2. Cryptococcus: Inhaled disease and can be fatal if it gets in to the blood stream This is an AIDS defining illness that causes pulmonary infections and meningitis ( symptoms are slow but fatal). Agents that cause this disease are C. neoformans (most common - has a massive capsule) and C. gatti (near river reg gum trees)
  3. Aspergillosis: Saprophytic (fungus ball grows in TB cavity), allergic or systemic
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11
Q

What methods can you use to diagnose fungal infections?

A
Microscopy
Culture
Antigen detection (for cryptococcus - latex agglutination).
PCR (only some fungi)
Other: Mass-spec ("black box")
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12
Q

How do you treat fungal infections?

A

Systemic: Polyenes (amphotericin B), triazoles, echinocandins, 5-flurocytosine

Topical: Polyenes, imidazoles

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13
Q

What are the targets of anti-fungal agents?

A

They target ergosterol, a cytoplasmic membrane structure that is like cholesterol.
Polyenes affect integrity while triazoles affect the synthesis of ergosterol

Other tagets include nucleic acids - 5-flurocytosine (prodrug) affects DNA and RNA synthesis. It doesn’t affect our DNA because we don’t have the necessary enzyme to activate it.

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14
Q

What is the treatment of systemic fungal infections

A

• Candida spp : fluconazole; amphotericin B;
caspofungin
• Cryptococcus : amphotericin B + 5-fluorocytosine
• Aspergillus : voriconazole; amphotericin B
• Dimorphic fungi : amphotericin B

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15
Q

Treatment of dermatophytosis

A

Non-specific: reduce fungal load

Topical:
• terbinafine (“Lamisil”)
• clotrimazole (“Canesten”)
• amorolfine (“Loceryl”)

Oral:
• terbinafine
• fluconazole
• griseofulvin

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