Friday, April 10, 2020

Candida

  • Normal Habitat: 
  • mucosal membranes of human and other warm blooded animals.
  • Also found in the gut, the vagina or also in the surface of the skin.
  • Found in the digestive tract of birds also.
  • Isolated from soil, animal, hospitals, in-animate objects and food.
  • Worldwide distribution
Morphology of Candida albicans

  • MORPHOLOGY
  • Small, oval, measuring 2-4 µm in diameter.
  • Yeast form, unicellular, reproduce by budding.
  • Single budding of the cells may be seen.
  • Both yeast and pseudo-hyphae are gram positive.
  • Encapsulated and diploid, also form true hyphae.
  • Polymorphic fungus (yeast and pseudohyphal form)
  • Can form biofilms
  • Normal condition: Yeast
  • Special condition (pH, Temperature): Pseudohyphae
  • 80-90% of cell wall is carbohydrate
Candida albicans on SDA

  • on SDA
  • Creamy, pasty colonies, smooth after 24-48 hours at 25-37°C
  • Yeast smell (odour)
Candida albicans on Blood Agar
Candida albicans on Blood Agar
  • White creamy colored
  • Foot-like extensions from the margin.
  • Opportunistic fungal pathogen that causes candidiasis in human
  • Occurs in immunocompromised peoples such as HIV infected, transplant recipients, chemotherapy patients, etc.
  • Mode of transmission:
    • Mother to infant through childbirth
    • Rarely through sexual contact
    • People to people transmission in hospital settings
Stages of Infection
  1. Colonization
  • Epithelial adhesion
  • Nutrient acquisition
  1. Superficial Infection
  • Epithelial penetration
  • Degradation of host protein
  1. Deep-Seated Infection
  • Tissue penetration
  • Vascular invasion
  • Immune evasion or escape
  1. Disseminated Infection
  • Endothelial adhesion
  • Infection of other host tissues
  • Activation of coagulation and blood clotting cascades.
Types of Candidiasis
Mucosal Candidiasis
  • Oral candidiasis: mucous membrane of mouth
  • Denture related stomatitis: mild inflammation and redness of oral mucous membrane beneath a denture.
  • Angular cheilitis: inflammation of one or both corners of the mouth
  • Median rhomboid glossitis: redness and loss of lingual papillae
  • Vulvovaginitis: white lesions on the epithelial surfaces of vulva, vagina and cervix
  • Balanitis: infection of glans penis
  • Esophageal candidiasis: infection of esophagus painful swallowing.
Cutaneous Candidiasis
  • Candida folliculitis: infection and inflammation of hair follicles, rash may appear as pimples.
  • Candidal intertrigo: infection of skin located between intertriginous folds of adjacent skin.
  • Candidal paronychia: inflammation of the nail fold.
  • Perianal candidiasis: irritation of the skin at the exit of the rectum.
  • Chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis: immune disorder of T cells, deficient of CMI.
  • Congenital cutaneous candidiasis: skin condition in new borne babies caused by premature rupture of membranes together with a birth canal infected with C. albicans.
  • Diaper candidiasis: infection of a child’s diaper area.
  • Erosio interdigitalis blastomycetia: characterized by an oval shaped area of macerated white skin on the web between and extending onto the sides of the fingers.
  • Candidal onychomycosis: nail infection
Systemic Candidiasis
  • Candidemia: leads of sepsis
  • Disseminated candidiasis (organs)
  • Endocarditis
  • Gastro intestinal tract infection
  • Respiratory tract infection
  • Genitourinary candidiasis
  • Hepatosplenic candidiasis (Chronic Disseminated Candidiasis)

Lab Diagnosis of Candida albicans

Specimens: Exudates, Tissues, Scrapings
  1. Microscopy (Scraping)
  • Examined in wet film in 10% KOH
  • Visualization of pseudohyphae and budding yeast cells of candida
  • Gram staining: Gram positive (+ve)
  1. Culture
  • SDA: Creamy white, smooth colonies
  • CHROMAGAR: Green colonies
  1. Identification of albicans
  • Germ Tube Test: produce germ tube test within 2 hours when incubated in human serum at 37°C.
  • Chlamydospores: produced by C. albicans on corn meal/rice agar at 25°C. They produces round thick walled chlamydospores borne terminally or laterally.
  • Biochemical Tests: Glucose and maltose fermented with acid and gas production, sucrose and lactose not fermented, Pale pink coloration in Tetrazolium reduction medium
  1. Serology
  • Limited specificity
  • Serum antibodies and cell mediated immunity are demonstrable in most people because of life long exposure to C. albicans.
  • C. albicans antigen is a delayed hypersensitivity skin test, which is used as an indicator of functions of the CMI.
  • ELISA and RIA: detection of circulating Candidial antigen either cell wall mannan or cytoplasmic constituents.
  1. 1,3-beta-D-glucan assay
  • Beta-D-glucan is a component of the cell wall of fungi.
  • Detected by its ability to activate factor G of the horse-shoe crab coagulation cascade.
  • Highly specific and sensitive test.
  1. DNA probe and PCR

Treatments of Candida albicans

Treatments of Candidiasis
  1. Oral candidiasis: Nystatin, miconazole, amphotericin B.
  2. Cutaneous candidiasis: Clotrimazole, econazole, ciclopirox, miconazole, ketoconazole, nystatin.
  3. Systemic and oral azoles: Fluconazole, itraconazole or posaconazole.
  4. Vulvovaginitis: single dose of oral fluconazole, topical antifungals (butoconazole, clotrimazole, miconazole, nystatin, ticonazole, terconazole).
  5. Blood infections: intravenous fluconazole or an echinocandin (caspofungin)
  6. Candidemia: Fluconazole and Anidulafungin

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