Infection of Penicillium marneffei.
- Author:
Zhao-Hui LU
1
;
Hong-Rui LIU
;
Xiu-Li XIE
;
Ai-Xia WANG
;
Tong-Hua LIU
Author Information
- Publication Type:Case Reports
- MeSH: AIDS-Related Opportunistic Infections; diagnosis; drug therapy; microbiology; Amphotericin B; therapeutic use; Antifungal Agents; therapeutic use; Drug Therapy, Combination; Humans; Itraconazole; therapeutic use; Male; Middle Aged; Mycoses; diagnosis; drug therapy; microbiology; Penicillium; isolation & purification
- From: Chinese Journal of Pathology 2004;33(6):536-540
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
OBJECTIVESTo elucidate the etiology, pathohistology, clinical characteristic and differential diagnosis, reduce missed diagnosis and improve the early detection and treatment of Penicillium Marneffei infection, by means of this case report and literature review.
METHODSA patient hospitalized Penicillium Marneffei infection were presented here, together with 27 cases in the literature, among which 10 patients had complications of AIDS and 5 with other diseases.
RESULTSPenicillium Marneffei is a temperature-sensitive, two-phase fungus, which can infect healthy and immunocompromised subjects. The common symptoms are lymphadenopathy and infection of the lung. The infection may be local or diffuse, involving the intestinal tract, soft tissue, bone, liver, spleen and bone marrow etc. The lesion can be classified into the granuloma type, suppurative type and anergy/necrosis type histologically. The yeast-like fungus were mainly found in the cytoplasm of macrophages, which were demonstrated by PAS and Giemsa staining. The wine red color developed on the culture confirms the diagnosis.
CONCLUSIONSThe diagnosis of Penicillium Marneffei infection should be considered when tuberculosis is suspected but not confirmed, and if the patient has a history of having lived or traveled in Southeast Asia, is anemic or resistant to anti-tuberculosis treatment. The major differential diagnosis is histoplasmosis. Early administration of anti-fungus drugs is essential for recovery.