Literature DB >> 25306958

[Trichosporon asahii an emerging etiologic agent of fungal infection and colonization in heart failure patients in intensive care unit: case report and literature review].

Antônio Aurélio de Paiva Fagundes Júnior1, Ricardo Tavares de Carvalho1, Rinaldo Focaccia1, Juliana Gabriela Fernandez1, Hélia Beatriz Nunes de Araújo1, Tânia Mara Varejão Strabelli1, Liliane Kopel1, Silvia G Lage1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Infection with the non-Candida yeast species Trichosporon have been recognized with increasing frequency over the last two decades. Invasive disease due to trichosporonosis has been reported from neutropenic patients with cancer and the mortality is high. Recently, others groups of patients have become susceptible to this rare fungi. We report the emerging of infection with pathogenic Trichosporon asahii in severely ill heart failure patients in a tertiary cardiological intensive care unit (CICU). We describe our data, and report a fatal case of disseminated trichosporonosis in a patient with heart failure. We also review literature pertaining to T. asahii infections. CASE REPORT: An 85 year-old woman with a history of hypertension, heart failure (ejection fraction (EJ): 30%) and pulmonary embolism was admitted to a medical cardiological ICU after cardiac arrest (ventricular fibrillation) resuscitated during a routine consultation. There were no neurological sequelae and the echocardiogram revels no changes, neither the cardiac biomarkers. Ventricular fibrillation was considered secondary to heart failure. The patient had extubation failure and difficult weaning needing long term mechanical ventilation even after tracheostomy. Her hospital course was complicated by acute renal failure and recurrent respiratory, urinary and systemic bacterial infections, which responded to broad-spectrum antibiotics. After a temporary improvement she developed urinary infection and subsequent septic shock. Cultures of urine and blood specimens grew T. asahii. Treatment with liposome amphotericin B (5 mg/kg/day) was started. Despite receiving vancomycin and imipenem, the clinical condition of the patient deteriorates. Blood taken for culture on the seventh day of amphotericin B therapy were negative but urine specimen still grew T. asahii. On the eighteenth day of antifungal therapy, the patient died with multiorgan failure.
CONCLUSIONS: The increasing of severely ill patients, and the use of broad spectrum antibiotics, has predisposed the emerging of invasive infections by rare and new opportunistic fungal pathogens. Severe infection related to T. asahii, until recently restricted to neutropenic patients with cancer, has been frequently identified in heart failure patients with advanced age. The mortality is high. These data highlights the importance of considering this group of patients as a risk group for T. asahii infection.

Entities:  

Year:  2008        PMID: 25306958

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Rev Bras Ter Intensiva        ISSN: 0103-507X


  4 in total

Review 1.  Nanotechnology-based drug delivery systems for control of microbial biofilms: a review.

Authors:  Matheus Aparecido Dos Santos Ramos; Patrícia Bento Da Silva; Larissa Spósito; Luciani Gaspar De Toledo; Bruna Vidal Bonifácio; Camila Fernanda Rodero; Karen Cristina Dos Santos; Marlus Chorilli; Taís Maria Bauab
Journal:  Int J Nanomedicine       Date:  2018-02-27

2.  Urinary tract infections due to Trichosporon spp. in severely ill patients in an intensive care unit.

Authors:  Maria das Graças Silva Mattede; Cláudio Piras; Kelly Dematte Silva Mattede; Aline Trugilho Ferrari; Lorena Simões Baldotto; Michel Silvestre Zouain Assbu
Journal:  Rev Bras Ter Intensiva       Date:  2015 Jul-Sep

Review 3.  Invasive Trichosporon Infection: a Systematic Review on a Re-emerging Fungal Pathogen.

Authors:  João N de Almeida Júnior; Christophe Hennequin
Journal:  Front Microbiol       Date:  2016-10-17       Impact factor: 5.640

4.  Genetic diversity and antifungal susceptibility testing of Trichosporon asahii isolated of Intensive Care Units patients.

Authors:  Rosana Bellan de Oliveira Silva; Ana Marisa Fusco-Almeida; Marcelo Teruyuki Matsumoto; Lilian Cristiane Baeza; Tatiane Benaducci; Maria José Soares Mendes-Giannini
Journal:  Braz J Microbiol       Date:  2008-09-01       Impact factor: 2.476

  4 in total

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