Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Part 1 Diagnosis, host defence and antimicrobials
- Part 2 Respiratory infections due to major respiratory pathogens
- 5 Pneumococcal pneumonia
- 6 Staphylococcal pneumonia
- 7 Haemophilus influenzae and Moraxella infections
- 8 Gram-negative bacillary pneumonia
- 9 Viral lower respiratory tract infections
- 10 Cytomegalovirus pneumonia
- 11 Non-tuberculous mycobacteria
- 12 Actinomycosis and nocardiosis
- 13 Pneumonia due to small bacterial organisms
- 14 Legionellosis
- 15 Tuberculosis
- 16 Fungal respiratory disease
- Part 3 Major respiratory syndromes
- Index
16 - Fungal respiratory disease
from Part 2 - Respiratory infections due to major respiratory pathogens
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 October 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Part 1 Diagnosis, host defence and antimicrobials
- Part 2 Respiratory infections due to major respiratory pathogens
- 5 Pneumococcal pneumonia
- 6 Staphylococcal pneumonia
- 7 Haemophilus influenzae and Moraxella infections
- 8 Gram-negative bacillary pneumonia
- 9 Viral lower respiratory tract infections
- 10 Cytomegalovirus pneumonia
- 11 Non-tuberculous mycobacteria
- 12 Actinomycosis and nocardiosis
- 13 Pneumonia due to small bacterial organisms
- 14 Legionellosis
- 15 Tuberculosis
- 16 Fungal respiratory disease
- Part 3 Major respiratory syndromes
- Index
Summary
Introduction
This chapter describes the major fungal respiratory tract infections which are usually acquired in hospital or in individuals who are substantially immunocompromised.
Aspergillosis
Aspergillus moulds are highly ubiquitous, being found in soil, dust and water, often present in food stuffs, flowers and tobacco and commonly in decaying organic material. Therefore, the scene for human infection is easily set. Yet of the 300 or so species only approximately 20 are pathogenic to man of which Aspergillus fumigatus is the most frequently encountered. Aspergillus niger, Aspergillus flavus, and Aspergillus clavatus are seen less often. Appropriate settings of exposure, virulence factors and host response interact to produce several disease entities often distinctive but occasionally overlapping. This section will describe the pulmonary manifestations both in the normal host, namely, those due to colonisation phenomena, hypersensitivity reactions, chronic invasive pulmonary aspergillosis and in the immunocompromised host – acute invasive disease.
Microbiology
Aspergillus spp. grow well on organic substrates and best at 37 °C though they will grow at temperatures up to 45 °C. On laboratory media and in tissue fluffy powdery (Fig. 16.1) or velvety colonies of different colours are produced, which darken with sporulation. Mycelia are composed of the asexual reproductive conidiophores which bear conidia (Fig. 16.2). Specimens from the airways reflecting colonisation are characterised by the presence of these conidiophores. Hyphae are thick (not always uniformly) septate approximately 4 μ in diameter and branching at 45° angles.
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- Infectious Diseases of the Respiratory Tract , pp. 268 - 292Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1998
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