Acremonium: Introduction, Morphology, Pathogenecity, Lab Diagnosis and Treatment
Introduction of Acremonium
Acremonium in LPCB mount as shown above image. Species of this genus are commonly found in soil, decaying vegetation, and decaying food.
Morphology
Acremonium spp. is a slow grower and moderate growth on Sabouraud agar without cycloheximide. The colonies are white-gray or rose in color, with a velvety to cottony surface. The conidia may be single-celled ( ameroconidia), in chains, or in conidial masses, arising from short, unbranched, single, tapered phialides as shown above image.
Pathogenicity
This genus, Acremonium has long been recognized as an etiologic agent of the nail and corneal infection, mycetoma, peritonitis and dialysis fistulae infection, osteomyelitis, meningitis following spinal anesthesia in a normal person, cerebritis in an intravenous drug abuser, endocarditis in a prosthetic valve operation, and pulmonary infection in a child. Occasional deep Acremonium infections have been reported in patients with serious underlying medical conditions.
Medically important Acremonium species reported are-
Microscopy: Direct demonstration of the pathogenic fungi in clinical specimens e.g. KOH mount
Culture: Successful isolation of pathogenic fungi and fungal elements observation through LPCB preparation
Serology and molecular test: Supportive evidence of specific fungal infection (antigen, antibody, cell wall markers such as ß 1-3 Glucan and metabolite detection). However, PCR for the detection of fungal DNA is yet to be validated for routine diagnosis of any fungal infection.
Following antifungal drugs are useful to treat this fungal infection-
Itraconazole
Posaconazole
Voriconazole
Amphotericin B
Caspofungin
Anidulafungin
Keynotes
Microconidial Fusarium isolates may be confused with Acremonium, but they usually grow faster and have colonies with a characteristic fluffy appearance.
Acremonium having typical features- hyphomycetes with solitary, erect, hyaline, awl-shaped phialides producing single-celled. globose to cylindrical conidia, mostly in slimy heads.
Further Reading
Medical Mycology. Editors: Emmons and Binford, 2nd ed 1970, Publisher Lea and Febiger, Philadelphia.
Rippon’s JW: Medical Microbiology. The pathogenic fungi and the Pathogenic Actinomycetes. 3rd ed 1988 Publisher WB Saunder co, Philadelphia.
Clinical Microbiology Procedure Handbook, Chief in editor H.D. Isenberg, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New York, Publisher ASM (American Society for Microbiology), Washington DC.
A Textbook of Medical Mycology. Editor: Jagdish Chander. Publication Mehata, India.
Practical Laboratory Mycology. Editors: Koneman E.W. and G.D. Roberts, 3rd ed 1985, Publisher Williams and Wilkins, Baltimore.