نتایج جستجو برای: pseudallescheria boydii

تعداد نتایج: 478  

Journal: :Journal of travel medicine 2016
Xin-Yu Wang Sheng-Lei Yu Shu Chen Wen-Hong Zhang

A healthy 32-year-old backpacker experienced a motorcycle accident without helmet on a country road when he was travelling in Jiangxi Province, Eastern China. He fell into a roadside ditch and aspirated some polluted water. The traveller was rescued in a local hospital. The computer tomography of the skull showed multiple fractures (Figure 1A). A month later, his temperature rose to 39.1 C, and...

Journal: :Revista do Instituto de Medicina Tropical de Sao Paulo 2004
Luiz Carlos Severo Flávio de Mattos Oliveira Klaus Irion

Four cases of respiratory tract intracavitary colonization (fungus ball) due to Scedosporium apiospermum (teleomorph, Pseudallescheria boydii) are reported. The need for a careful search for anneloconidia, in order to establish the etiologic diagnosis in the clinical specimen by microscopy, is emphasized.

Journal: :Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy 2006
Fèlix Gilgado Carolina Serena Josep Cano Josepa Gené Josep Guarro

Eighty-four isolates belonging to eight species that constitute the Pseudallescheria boydii complex were tested against 11 antifungal agents by using the microdilution method. There were significant differences among the species, with Scedosporium aurantiacum being the most resistant. In general, voriconazole was the most active drug, followed by posaconazole.

2017
Rodrigo Rollin-Pinheiro Jardel V. de Meirelles Taissa V. M. Vila Beatriz B. Fonseca Vinicius Alves Susana Frases Sonia Rozental Eliana Barreto-Bergter

Pseudallescheria/Scedosporium species are medically important fungi that are present in soil and human impacted areas and capable of causing a wide spectrum of diseases in humans. Although little is known about their pathogenesis, their growth process and infection routes are very similar to those of Aspergillus species, which grow as biofilms in invasive infections. All nine strains tested her...

Journal: :Medical mycology 2006
Josep Guarro A Serda Kantarcioglu Regine Horré Juan Luis Rodriguez-Tudela Manuel Cuenca Estrella Juan Berenguer G Sybren de Hoog

Current knowledge on the opportunist Scedosporium apiospermum (teleomorph: Pseudallescheria boydii), generated over a period of more than 120 years, is reviewed. The natural environmental habitat of the fungus is unknown; nutrient-rich, brackish waters like river estuaria have been suggested. The fungus is strongly promoted by agricultural and particularly by industrial pollution.

2012
Subin Mathew Ravi Mohan Rao S Raghavendra BA Chandramouli Ravindra Kamble Sreedharan Athmanathan

Introduction Scedosporium apiospermum is the asexual form of fungus Pseudallescheria boydii which is commonly found in soil and sewage. It usually causes cutaneous infection (mycetoma) and otitis externa and in rare circumstances causes invasive disease in immunocompromised patients, which can involve the central nervous system with devastating prognosis. We report a case of brain abscess cause...

Journal: :Journal of clinical microbiology 2011
Adrian Ong Christopher C Blyth Rosamma Bency Mauro Vicaretti Azian Harun Wieland Meyer Meena Shingde Nicky Gilroy Jeremy Chapman Sharon C-A Chen

Angioinvasive complications of Scedosporium infections are rare. We report two cases of mycotic aneurysm, following apparent localized infection, due to Scedosporium apiospermum and Pseudallescheria boydii. The thoracoabdominal aorta was affected in one patient, and cerebral vessels were affected in the other. Despite voriconazole therapy and surgical resection, the patients died. Previously re...

Journal: :Medical mycology 2009
André L S Santos Vera C B Bittencourt Marcia R Pinto Bianca A Silva Eliana Barreto-Bergter

The ubiquitous Pseudallescheria boydii (anamorph Scedosporium apiospermum) is a saprophytic filamentous fungus recognized as a potent etiologic agent of a wide variety of infections in immunocompromised as well as in immunocompetent patients. Very little is known about the virulence factors expressed by this fungal pathogen. The present review provides an overview of recent discoveries related ...

Journal: :Medical mycology 2010
Azian Harun Felix Gilgado Sharon C-A Chen Wieland Meyer

Members of the Pseudallescheria/Scedosporium species complex are emerging opportunistic fungal pathogens which have the capacity to colonize patients with damaged airways, including those with cystic fibrosis (CF). Assuming human infection is acquired via inhalation of fungal spores from the environment, we performed a qualitative environmental survey encompassing 25 urban, semirural and rural ...

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