1,363 research outputs found
Dermatophytes’ identification by Matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry. (MALDI-TOF MS) - the experience of a clinical laboratory
Objectives:
Dermatophytes are a challenging group of fungi that infect the keratinized tissues. The taxonomy of these
fungi has changed recently with the reclassification of some species and description of new ones. However,
many clinical laboratories still base the identification of dermatophytes on their phenotype. Since
dermatophytes are very pleomorphic, macro and micromorphology are often insufficient to reach a correct
classification and may lead to misidentifications. The identification based on MALDI-TOF relies on the protein
profile of the microorganism. Thus, this study aims to summarize our current laboratorial experience of
dermatophyte identification using MALDI-TOF MS.
Methods:
From january to april 2018, 95 dermatophytes isolates, collected from human keratinized samples and also
from quality control programs were characterized by phenotypic analysis, and by VITEK MS V3.2 bioMerieux.
Before identification procedure, isolates were inoculated on Sabouraud Dextrose agar plates and incubated at
27°C during 5 to 10 days. Species were identified taking into account clinical features, as well as cultural,
microscopic and physiological characteristics. Prior to MALDI-TOF MS analysis, the samples were pre-treated
according to the manufacturer’s protocol for filamentous fungi. Molecular identification by sequencing of the
internal transcribed spacer 1 (ITS1) was performed in 34 of those isolates
Results:
Through phenotypic analysis eight different species were identified (54 Trichophyton rubrum; 4 T.soudanense;
22 T.interdigitale; 1 T.mentagrophytes; 3 T.tonsurans; 7 Microsporum canis; 3 M.audouinii; 1 Microsporum
spp.- (non canis or audouinii). MALDI-TOF analysis showed an identification agreement in 80 cases (84,2%)
with a confidence level of 99,9%. Eight isolates showed divergent identification results: three T.rubrum were
identified as T.violaceum, three T.soudanense were identified as T.rubrum, one T.mentagrophytes was
identified as T.interdigitale and one T.tonsurans was identified as T.rubrum. In four cases MALDI-TOF analysis
did not get a profile. The ITS sequencing analysis of discrepant results corroborated the MALDI-TOF
identification in five of them. On the other hand, T.soudanense was only identified by phenotypic analysis since
MALDI-TOF and ITS sequencing result was T.rubrum. MALDITOF identification of T.violaceum was not
confirmed by ITS sequencing that identified T. rubrum instead, in accordance with the phenotypic
identification.
Conclusion:
Correct identification of dermatophytes to species level requires sequencing of the ITS, LSU, and/or betatubulin
regions. The implementation of this methodology in a clinical laboratory is expensive and time
consuming. MALDI-TOF identification is a good option for dermatophytes’ identification performed in
laboratory routine, since costs of consumables as well as time of sample preparation are lower than for PCR
analysis and doesn’t require long training period as phenotypic identification does. In this study, however, both
methods failed to identify some species variants like Trichophyton soudanense or T. violaceum. The combined
use of both MALDI-TOF and phenotypic methods seems to be the better approach for dermatophytes’
identification since some species show significant phenotypic and clinical differences.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Frequency and molecular epidemiology of Aspergillus isolated from patients with suspicion of respiratory fungal infection
Objective: The aim of this study was to determine the frequency of Aspergillus detected in respiratory samples from a cohort of patients with suspicion of fungal infection of the respiratory tract as well as to determine the susceptibility to azoles of the isolates from the Fumigati section.
Methods: A retrospective study was performed involving samples obtained from 16 hospitals covering different districts of continental Portugal and Azores islands. One hundred and eighty-seven respiratory samples (101 bronchoalveolar lavage fluids, 52 bronchial lavages, 27 bronchial secretions, 6 expectorations and 1 bronchial aspirate) were collected between November 2011 and December 2017 from a cohort of 146 patients with suspicion of respiratory fungal infection (ages ranging from 20 to 87 years old). Demographic and clinical data were recorded. Detection of Aspergillus was done by culture, immunoenzimatic assay and/or molecular techniques. Aspergillus molecular identification to species level was performed by sequencing of the calmodulin and β-tubulin genes. To detect possible resistance to azoles, isolates belonging to section Fumigati were inoculated into Sabouraud dextrose agar media supplemented with 1 µg/ml or 4 µg/ml of voriconazole, 4 µg/ml of itraconazole and 0.5 µg/ml of posaconazole and their growth was observed and recorded after 7 days of incubation at 27ºC. Doubtful results were confirmed when possible by E-test and by real-time multiplex PCR for the detection of mutations in the Cyp51A gene.
Results: Fifty-seven (39.0%) of the studied patients were positive for Aspergillus. From the cases with a positive culture (n=58) the species were identified by sequencing and belonged to six different sections. The most frequently isolated was the section Nigri (42.1%) followed by the Fumigati (33.3%) and Flavi sections (8.6%). Regarding the species, the most frequent was A. niger sensu stricto (33.9%) followed by A. fumigatus sensu stricto (32.1%). Nine cryptic species were also identified which frequency was 21.4%. In order to study the frequency of azole resistance in Fumigati isolates collected from the samples of this cohort as well from other biological products, 52 isolates - Aspergillus fumigatus sensu stricto (n=45), A. lentulus (n=4), A. udagawae (n=2) and A. pseudofelis (n=1) – were tested. The tested A. fumigatus sensu stricto isolates did not show resistance to azoles. An A. udagawae strain revealed low susceptibility to voriconazole (MIC was not determined due to loss of strain viability). An A. pseudofelis strain also showed decreased susceptibility to voriconazole (MIC =1 μg/ml) as well as to and itraconazole (MIC = 2 μg/ml).
Conclusion: In this study, the genus Aspergillus was frequently isolated in the respiratory samples tested and a high number of cryptic species was detected. Although resistance to azoles was not a problem identified in the tested isolates, determination of the in vitro susceptibility profile and molecular identification of the Aspergillus species is essential to improve the diagnosis and management of aspergillosis since several cryptic species have intrinsic resistance to antifungal drugs.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Polarons in Carbon Nanotubes
We use ab initio total-energy calculations to predict the existence of
polarons in semiconducting carbon nanotubes (CNTs). We find that the CNTs' band
edge energies vary linearly and the elastic energy increases quadratically with
both radial and with axial distortions, leading to the spontaneous formation of
polarons. Using a continuum model parametrized by the ab initio calculations,
we estimate electron and hole polaron lengths, energies and effective masses
and analyze their complex dependence on CNT geometry. Implications of polaron
effects on recently observed electro- and opto-mechanical behavior of CNTs are
discussed.Comment: Revtex preprint format, 12 pages, 2 eps figures, source in LaTeX.
Accepted for publication in Physical Review Letter
Majocchi’s Granuloma by Trichophytum rubrum in a kidney transplant patient - A case report
Introduction: Trichophytum rubrum is a filamentous fungus, with worldwide distribution, that usually causes
superficial infections of skin and nails, namely tinea pedis, tinea corporis, tinea cruris and onychomycosis.
Rarely, severe dermatophytosis can occur, presenting as deep dermatophytosis, Majocchi’s Granuloma or
extensive dermatophytosis.
Objectives and Methods: Case report of Majocchi’s Granuloma in a kidney transplant patient.
Results: A case of a 55-year-old woman who underwent a kidney transplant 7 months before, under
immunosuppressive therapy with tacrolimus and mycophenolate mofetil. She attended a Dermatology
consultation to clarify skin lesions that appeared 6 months earlier. The skin exam revealed hard and painful
plaque lesions on both legs, with an ulcer on the left leg lesion, violaceous papular lesions on the dorsum of
the left foot and toes and a hard consistency nodule on the left leg. Some of the toe nails presented dystrophy
or onycholysis. The patient denied any previous trauma or contact with plants or soil.
Biopsies of lesions of the left leg and foot dorsum where sent for histology and mycological culture and toe
nails for mycological culture. The histological examinations showed, in the reticular dermis and reaching the
hypodermis, suppurative granulomas with multinucleated giant cells and areas of necrosis. PAS (Periodic Acid-
Schiff) and GMS (Grocott’s Methenamine Silver) staining revealed multiple spores and septate hypha within the
granulomas but not in the stratum corneum. No remnants of hair follicles where found.
Culture of skin biopsies were positive for Tricophytum rubrum but nails´ culture was negative.
Identification was further confirmed by sequencing of ITS region of ribosomal DNA (GenBank accession
number MK967277).
Oral Itraconazole 100mg bid and topic Sertoconazole where initiated. The patient was observed one month
after and reported general malaise, tiredness, exertional dyspnea, whitish stools and increased abdominal
volume. The physician chose to discontinue itraconazole and initiate oral terbinafine 250mg id. After two
months on oral terbinafine, there was regression of the legs´ and left foot lesions with ulcer healing and
disappearance of the left leg nodule.
Conclusion: Diagnosis of deeper dermatophytosis is difficult, in part because there is no specific clinical
presentation and, in many cases, it is even polymorphic. However, especially in patients with
immunodeficiency, this hypothesis should be weighed. Confirmation is achieved by finding hyphae compatible
with dermatophytes in the dermis and a positive culture for a dermatophyte.
Treatment should include systemic antifungal agents, to which topical medication may be associated. Multiple
therapeutic regimens have been proposed, but randomized trials or large case series are lacking. Antifungal
therapy should be continued until the lesions are completely resolved. Surgical treatment has been reported as
an option for highly localized lesions.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Quality of Life in Inflammatory Bowel Disease: Psychometric evaluation of an IBDQ cross-culturally adapted version
The health related quality of life (HR-QoL) construct was introduced as a requirement to assess the subjective health status. It is a multifaceted construct that has been recognized to contribute for a better understanding of the patients' adaptation to his condition. The Inflammatory Bowel Disease Questionnaire (IBDQ), a widely used instrument to asses QoL among IBD patients, has already shown its validity and reliability. Our aim was to get a light-footed revised version of the IBDQ and to investigate its cross-cultural psychometric properties.Carried out in a sample of outpatients recruited in a specialized University Clinic (n = 76), this study began with the translation and linguistic validation of a self-report 32-item version of the questionnaire with a 7-point Likert type answering system. Just to assess thereafter its reliability through internal consistencies; and also looking into its discriminatory power. Furthermore we also investigated its convergent validity with other health status - clinical assessment, SCDAI and CDAI-m - and well-being measures. With a Cronbach's alpha = 0.92 for the global scale and a mean 0.82 for the subscales, internal consistencies proved rather adequate. On the other hand, discriminatory power was also significantly according to the model. Moreover, the expected correlations between IBDQ and the clinical assessment, SCDAI, CDAI-m and perception of well-being support evidence of IBDQ-R's convergent validity.This IBDQ revised version is a highly promising instrument to easily, yet feasibly and comprehensively assess Quality of Life in Inflammatory Bowel Disease; therefore its use in daily practice is worthy of recommendation
Comparison of fungal contamination between hospitals and companies food units
A descriptive study was developed to compare air and surfaces fungal contamination in ten hospitals’ food units and two food units from companies. Fifty air samples of 250 litres through impaction method were collected from hospitals’ food units and 41 swab samples from surfaces were also collected, using a 10 by 10 cm square stencil. Regarding the two companies, ten air samples and eight surface samples were collected. Air and surface samples were collected in food storage facilities, kitchen, food plating and canteen. Outdoor air was also collected since this is the place regarded as a reference. Simultaneously, temperature, relative humidity and meal numbers were registered. Concerning air from hospitals’ food units, 32 fungal species were identified, being the two most commonly isolated genera Penicillium sp
Comparison of indoor and outdoor fungi and particles in poultry units
A descriptive study was developed in order to compare indoor and outdoor air contamination caused by fungi and particles in seven poultry units. Twenty eight air samples of 25 litters were collected through the impaction method on malt extract agar.
Air sampling and particles concentration measurement were done in the interior and also outside premises of the poultries’ pavilions. Regarding the fungal load in the air, indoor concentration of mold was higher than outside air in six poultry units. Twenty eight species / genera of fungi were identified indoor, being Scopulariopsis brevicaulis (40.5%) the most commonly isolated species and Rhizopus sp. (30.0%) the most commonly isolated genus. Concerning outdoor, eighteen species/genera of fungi were isolated, being Scopulariopsis brevicaulis (62.6%) also the most isolated.
All the poultry farms analyzed presented indoor fungi different from the ones identified outdoors. Regarding particles’ contamination, PM2.5, PM5.0 and PM10 had a statistically significant difference (Mann-Whitney U test) between the inside and outside of the pavilions, with the inside more contaminated (p=.006; p=.005; p=.005, respectively). The analyzed poultry units are potential reservoirs of substantial amounts of fungi and particles and could therefore free them in the atmospheric air.
The developed study showed that indoor air was more contaminated than outdoors, and this can result in emission of potentially pathogenic fungi and particles via aerosols from poultry units to the environment, which may post a considerable risk to public health and contribute to environmental pollution
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