Blastomyces helicus, a New Dimorphic Fungus Causing Fatal Pulmonary and Systemic Disease in Humans and Animals in Western Canada and the United States.

dc.contributor.author

Schwartz, Ilan S

dc.contributor.author

Wiederhold, Nathan P

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Hanson, Kimberly E

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Patterson, Thomas F

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Sigler, Lynne

dc.date.accessioned

2022-08-25T15:54:48Z

dc.date.available

2022-08-25T15:54:48Z

dc.date.issued

2019-01

dc.date.updated

2022-08-25T15:54:43Z

dc.description.abstract

Background

Blastomyces helicus (formerly Emmonsia helica) is a dimorphic fungus first isolated from a man with fungal encephalitis in Alberta, Canada. The geographic range, epidemiology, and clinical features of disease are unknown.

Methods

We reviewed human and veterinary isolates of B. helicus identified among Blastomyces and Emmonsia isolates at the University of Alberta Microfungus Collection and Herbarium, University of Texas Health San Antonio's Fungus Testing Laboratory, and Associated Regional and University Pathologists Laboratories. Isolates were selected based on low Blastomyces dermatitidis DNA probe values and/or atypical morphology. Species identification was confirmed for most isolates by DNA sequence analysis of the internal transcribed spacer with or without D1/D2 ribosomal RNA regions. Epidemiological and clinical data were analyzed.

Results

We identified isolates from 10 human and 5 veterinary cases of B. helicus infection; all were referred from western regions of Canada and the United States. Isolates remained sterile in culture, producing neither conidia nor sexual spores in the mycelial phase, but often producing coiled hyphae. Isolates were most frequently cultured from blood and bronchoalveolar lavage in humans and lungs in animals. Most infected persons were immunocompromised. Histopathological findings included pleomorphic, small or variably sized yeast-like cells, with single or multiple budding, sometimes proliferating to form short, branching, hyphal-like elements. Disease carried a high case-fatality rate.

Conclusions

Blastomyces helicus causes fatal pulmonary and systemic disease in humans and companion animals. It differs from B. dermatitidis in morphological presentation in culture and in histopathology, by primarily affecting immunocompromised persons, and in a geographic range that includes western regions of North America.
dc.identifier

5034009

dc.identifier.issn

1058-4838

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1537-6591

dc.identifier.uri

https://hdl.handle.net/10161/25605

dc.language

eng

dc.relation.ispartof

Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America

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10.1093/cid/ciy483

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Animals

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Humans

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Blastomyces

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Communicable Diseases, Emerging

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Mycoses

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Lung Diseases, Fungal

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Canada

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United States

dc.title

Blastomyces helicus, a New Dimorphic Fungus Causing Fatal Pulmonary and Systemic Disease in Humans and Animals in Western Canada and the United States.

dc.type

Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Schwartz, Ilan S|0000-0002-7522-0281

pubs.begin-page

188

pubs.end-page

195

pubs.issue

2

pubs.organisational-group

Duke

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School of Medicine

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Clinical Science Departments

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Medicine

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Medicine, Infectious Diseases

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

68

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