Blood Culture–Positive Molds: Introduction, Common molds, Comparison, and Keynotes

Blood Culture–Positive Molds

Introduction Blood cultures are the cornerstone for diagnosing fungemia, but while yeasts (Candida spp.) are frequently detected, molds are rarely recovered in blood culture systems. This is because most molds (Aspergillus, Mucorales) cause tissue-invasive disease without sustained fungemia. However, certain molds such as Fusarium spp. …

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Comparative Microscopy of Common Clinical Fungi-Introduction, Table, and Appearance at Different Magnifications

Aspergillus in LPCB tease mount of culture

Introduction Microscopy remains one of the cornerstones of clinical mycology, providing a rapid and inexpensive method for the direct detection and preliminary identification of fungi. Comparative microscopy is particularly valuable in distinguishing the morphological features of common clinical fungi, many of which exhibit overlapping clinical …

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Yeasts vs Molds: Detailed Comparison, Mixed Growth Isolation, Approach to Mixed Growth Handling, and Mixed Growth Interpretation

Yeast and mold mixed growth on SDA

Yeasts vs Molds: Detailed Comparison Feature Yeasts Molds Definition Unicellular fungi Multicellular filamentous fungi Structure Oval/round, single cells Hyphae form mycelium; septate or aseptate Reproduction Asexual (budding or fission); some sexual forms Asexual (spores like conidia/sporangia); sexual spores Hyphae Absent, but pseudohyphae may be present …

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KOH Wet Mount Preparation: Introduction, Principle, Test Requirements, Procedure, Result Interpretation, Uses, Keynotes, and Collection of KOH Mount Footages

KOH Wet Mount Preparation: Introduction, Principle, Test Requirements, Procedure, Result Interpretation, Uses, Keynotes, and Collection of KOH Mount Footages

Potassium hydroxide (KOH) Wet Mount Introduction The KOH Wet Mount is a very simple and important technique in mycology for presumptive diagnosis of the type of fungal infections whether ringworm, aspergillosis, dermatomycosis, blastomycosis, mucormycosis, otomycosis, etc. It is the most common assay ordered by clinicians, particularly …

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