epiglucan and Communicable-Diseases--Emerging

epiglucan has been researched along with Communicable-Diseases--Emerging* in 4 studies

Reviews

3 review(s) available for epiglucan and Communicable-Diseases--Emerging

ArticleYear
Human Pythiosis: Emergence of Fungal-Like Organism.
    Mycopathologia, 2020, Volume: 185, Issue:5

    Pythiosis is an emerging infectious disease caused by the aquatic oomycete Pythium insidiosum, a fungal-like organism. It is believed that P. insidiosum's zoospores, its infected form, play major role in pathogenesis. Vascular and ocular infections are the most common clinical manifestation in humans. It is difficult to establish the diagnosis given its relatively rarity and difficulty to distinguish P. insidiosum from other molds. Delay in diagnosis and treatment has been associated with poor outcomes. High index of suspicion is the key, particularly in thalassemia patients with arterial insufficiency and patients with fungal keratitis/endophthalmitis without improvement on antifungal therapy. Tissue culture and zoospore induction remain gold standard for diagnosis; however, DNA-based method should be performed simultaneously. The combination of radical surgery, antifungal agents, and immunotherapy has been recommended. It was previously believed that surgery with negative surgical margins was the essential to survive in vascular pythiosis; however, it was recently found that patients could have residual disease despite documented negative surgical margins as infected clot may be dislodged to proximal arterial sites prior to surgery. Serum β-D-glucan (BG) has been used to monitor disease response after treatment initiation in vascular pythiosis. A significant decrease in BG levels within 2 weeks after surgery is indicative of the absence of residual infection. Unfortunately, monitoring tools for ocular pythiosis are not yet available. Itraconazole plus terbinafine have generally been used in P. insidiosum-infected patients; however, antibacterial agents, including azithromycin and linezolid, have also been used with favorable outcomes in ocular disease. Recently, azithromycin or clarithromycin plus doxycyclin were used in two relapsed vascular pythiosis patients with good outcomes.

    Topics: Anti-Bacterial Agents; Antifungal Agents; beta-Glucans; Communicable Diseases, Emerging; Drug Combinations; Eye Infections, Fungal; Immunotherapy; Itraconazole; Oomycetes; Pathology, Molecular; Pythiosis; Pythium; Serologic Tests; Spores, Fungal; Terbinafine; Thalassemia; Vascular System Injuries

2020
Emerging opportunistic yeast infections.
    The Lancet. Infectious diseases, 2011, Volume: 11, Issue:2

    A growing population of immunosuppressed patients has resulted in increasingly frequent diagnoses of invasive fungal infections, including those caused by unusual yeasts. The incidence of non-albicans species of Candida is increasing compared with that of Candida albicans, and several species, such as Candida glabrata and Candida krusei, may be resistant to azole antifungal therapy. Trichosporon species are the second most common cause of fungaemia in patients with haematological malignant disease and are characterised by resistance to amphotericin and echinocandins and poor prognosis. Rhodotorula species belong to the family Cryptococcaceae, and are a cause of catheter-related fungaemia, sepsis, and invasive disease in severely immunosuppressed patients. An increasing number of sporadic cases of invasive fungal infections by non-neoformans cryptococci have been reported in immunocompromised hosts, especially for patients with advanced HIV infection or cancer who are undergoing transplant. Other uncommon yeasts that can cause invasive disease in severely immunosuppressed patients include Geotrichum, Hansenula, Malassezia, and Saccharomyces. Host immune status is a crucial determinant of the type of invasive fungal infection a patient is at risk for. Diagnosis can be challenging and relies heavily on traditional cultures of blood and other sterile sites, although serum (1,3)-β-D-glucan testing might have an adjunctive role. Although rare yeasts are emerging as opportunistic human pathogens, diagnosis remains challenging and treatment suboptimal.

    Topics: beta-Glucans; Clinical Laboratory Techniques; Communicable Diseases, Emerging; Fungi; Humans; Immunocompromised Host; Incidence; Mycology; Mycoses; Opportunistic Infections; Proteoglycans

2011
[Early diagnosis of invasive fungal infections caused by Aspergillus and other emerging mycelial fungi].
    Revista iberoamericana de micologia, 2007, Sep-30, Volume: 24, Issue:3

    The usefulness of surrogate markers in the diagnosis of invasive fungal infections caused by Aspergillus and other emerging mycelial fungi is based on the ability of surrogate markers to detect the infection caused by different species of mycelial fungi. Conventional microbiological methods for diagnosis of fungal disease are slow and insensitive. Antigen based assays or measurement of (1-3)-beta-D-glucan in blood have been developed and validated in clinical laboratories. We review these diagnostic contemporary tools, their clinical application and impact.

    Topics: Antibodies, Fungal; Antigens, Fungal; Aspergillosis; beta-Glucans; Biomarkers; Clinical Trials as Topic; Communicable Diseases, Emerging; DNA, Fungal; Early Diagnosis; Fungemia; Galactose; Humans; Immunologic Techniques; Mannans; Predictive Value of Tests; Proteoglycans; Risk Factors; Zygomycosis

2007

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for epiglucan and Communicable-Diseases--Emerging

ArticleYear
Experimental murine acremoniosis: an emerging opportunistic human infection.
    Medical mycology, 2014, Volume: 52, Issue:1

    Acremonium is an emerging fungal pathogen causing severe infections. We evaluated the virulence of three clinically relevant species within the genus, i.e., Acremonium kiliense (currently Sarocladium kiliense), Acremonium sclerotigenum-A. egyptiacum complex and Acremonium implicatum in a murine model of disseminated infection. Both immunocompetent and immunosuppresssed mice were infected with two inocula concentrations (2 × 10(6) and 2 × 10(8) conidia/animal) of two strains of each species. Tissue burden, mortality rate, histopathology and levels of (1→3)-β-D-glucan were used as virulence markers. None of the species of Acremonium tested was able to cause infection in immunocompetent mice. Conversely, severe infections were produced in immunocompromised mice, the spleen being the most affected organ. In general, the virulence of the Acremonium species tested was low, S. kiliense being the most virulent species.

    Topics: Acremonium; Animal Structures; Animals; beta-Glucans; Colony Count, Microbial; Communicable Diseases, Emerging; Disease Models, Animal; Histocytochemistry; Humans; Male; Mice; Microscopy; Mycoses; Opportunistic Infections; Proteoglycans; Survival Analysis; Virulence

2014