Bacteria and Fungi: Introduction, Description, Demonstration Techniques, Differences, and Keynotes

Bacteria and Fungi Introduction, Description, Demonstration Techniques, Differences, and Keynotes

Introduction of Bacteria and Fungi They are distinct types of microorganisms with different structures and characteristics. Bacteria are single-celled prokaryotes, while fungi can be single-celled (yeasts) or multicelled (molds, mushrooms) eukaryotes. They can be distinguished by their cell structure, colony morphology, and staining properties.  Description 1. Cell …

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Common Invasive Fungal Pathogens in Cancer Patients: Introduction, List, Risk factors, and Keynotes

Common Invasive Fungal Pathogens in Cancer Patients- Introduction, List, Risk factors, and Keynotes

Introduction Common invasive fungal pathogens that frequently affect cancer patients, especially those who are immunocompromised due to chemotherapy, hematologic malignancies, or bone marrow/stem cell transplants. List of Common Invasive Fungal Pathogens 1. Candida species Causes: Candidemia, disseminated candidiasisRisk: Neutropenia, central venous catheter, broad-spectrum antibiotics 2. …

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Candida-Antibody Testing-Introduction, Principle, Purpose, Types of antibody tests, Limitation, and More

Candida albicans growth on Biphasic medium (BHI agar and broth)-right (turbid)- No growth on left (clear)

Introduction Candida antibody testing measures immunoglobulins (IgG, IgA, and IgM) antibodies in the blood to help detect current or past Candida infections. These antibodies are produced in response to the presence of Candida in the body, assisting the immune system in fighting off the fungus. Principle Purpose …

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Biosafety Cabinet (BSC)-Introduction, Purpose and Function,  Working Mechanism, Types, and Application

Biosafety Cabinet (BSC)-Introduction, Purpose and Function,  Working Mechanism, Types, and Application

Introduction of Biosafety Cabinet (BSC) A biosafety cabinet (BSC) is a specialized enclosed, ventilated laboratory workspace that is designed for safely handling materials contaminated with pathogens or toxins. It protects the operator, the product being worked on, and the environment. BSC uses high-efficiency particulate air (HEPA)  filters to …

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Aspergillus and penicillium conidia differences: Introduction, Differences, Keynotes, and Further Readings

Conidia, conidiophore, phialides, vesicle of Aspergillus

Introduction Aspergillus conidia are produced on unbranched conidiophores with a vesicle, while Penicillium conidia are produced on branched conidiophores, forming brush-like structures. Both have small conidia, but differ in color and germination patterns.  The LPCB mount shows the hallmark features of an Aspergillus conidiophore: This brush‑ or radiate‑head …

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Cryptococcal Antigen (CrAg) Testing-Introduction, Principle, Sample used, Detection Methods, Clinical Significance, Limitations, and Keynotes

Cryptococcal Antigen (CrAg) Testing-Introduction, Principle, Sample used, Detection Methods, Clinical Significance, Limitations, and Keynotes

Introduction of Cryptococcal Antigen (CrAg) Testing  Cryptococcal antigen (CrAg) testing detects the presence of antigens produced by the Cryptococcus fungus in body fluids, aiding in the diagnosis of cryptococcosis, particularly meningitis. This test helps identify infection early, even before visible symptoms appear, and is crucial for timely …

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Chlamydospores: Nature’s Survival Spores in Fungi and Algae-Structure, Function, and Formation Under Adverse Conditions

Chlamydospores of Candida albicans in LPCB preparation of growth on cornmeal agar (CMA)

Introduction Chlamydospores are thick-walled, asexual, resting spores produced by certain fungi and algae, functioning as survival structures under adverse conditions, and are capable of developing into new individuals without sexual fusion.  What are they? Chlamydospores are thick-walled, asexual spores that are formed by certain fungi and …

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Candida albicans-Introduction, Morphology, Pathogenicity, Lab Diagnosis, Treatment, Prevention, and Keynotes

Yeast cells, budding yeasts, and pseudohyphae in KOH mount of sputum microscopic examination

Introduction Candida albicans is a common fungal pathogen in humans. It inhabits mucosal surfaces naturally and colonizes the gastrointestinal tract and genitourinary system frequently. The organism causes infections in both healthy and immunocompromised individuals and adapts quickly to environmental changes within the host. Clinicians report …

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