Oral Fungal Infections Flashcards

1
Q

Oral candidiasis is

A

Opportunistic fungal infection of the oral cavity

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2
Q

Candida

A

Yeast
Single cell organism
Transformation between different forms increases pathogenecity

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3
Q

Candidal virulence factors

A

Adherence
Switching mechanisms
Germ tube formation
Extracellular enzymes
Acidic metabolites

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4
Q

Predisposing factors

A

Disease only happens in pt with predisposing factors

Local factors- mechanical like dentures; smoking, local corticosteroids, xerostomia, topical antimicrobials
Generalised factors- immunosuppression like steroids or HIV, very young/old, endocrine disease like diabetes, nutritional deficiencies like iron, antibiotics

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5
Q

Classic of candidosis

A

Acute pseudomembranous -sudden local/systemic immunosuppression

Chronic erythematous - longstanding and persistent issue like poor fitting dentures. Can be due to HIV, denture stomatitis, antibiotic stomatitis, median rhomboid glossitis, angular cheilitis

Chronic hyperplastic- speckled (red and white) lesion cannot be wiped off, labial commissure is a common site. has malignancy potential

*Mucocutaneous candidiasis- congenital condition due to keratin defect

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6
Q

Diagnosis of candidiasis

A

Mainly clinical
Lab test: usually to help with the treatment, they don’t differentiate different types of candida only the quantity; don’t say how virulent canida is
Culture and sensitivity
Smear/microscopy occasionally

Swab, whole saliva/rinse - grown on selective agar to quantify the candida

Oral rinse- pt rinses with 10ml of PBS. It is then inoculated on selective agar plate on a spiral plater. Has the advantage of being “quantitative technique”

Direct microscopy
Germ tube test- fast
Both not used routinely

Biopsy- essential for diagnosis of hyperplastic candidiasis (using PAS stain)

Direct smear- quick results . Can be used for hyperplastic candidiasis but not without biopsy

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7
Q

Management of candidiasis

A

Correction of predisposing factors: OH, diet, trauma, steroid inhaler hygiene; identifying underlying illnesses

Antifungal agents
Consider co-infection with other microorganisms

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8
Q

Antifungal drugs

A

Polyenes: Nystatin, amphotericin

Imidazole: miconazole, clotrimazole

Triazoles: fluconazole, itraconazole

All district cell membrane

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9
Q

Treatment type

A

Topical- safer, for lengthty courses, less chances of side effects and drug interaction
Nystatin, amphotericin, miconazole

Systemic- more effective, short treatment time needed
Fluconazole, itraconazole

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10
Q

Miconazole

A

Not absorbed systematically
Interactive with warfarin
Available as cream, ointment, patch, gel
Cream/ointment comes with hydrocortisone
Gel should not be used for skin lesions

Effective against staphylococci as well as candida

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11
Q

Systemic antifungals

A

Fluconazole - 50 mg capsules taken once a day, 14 day course

Itraconazole - 100mg capsules, 14 day course, 100mg twice a day for pseudomembranous candidiasis

Interaction with warfarin and statins.

If nausea happens- stop the treatment

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12
Q

Candida resistant to antifungal agents

A

C. glabrata
C. kruseii
C. dubliniensis

Not common

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