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Fungal infections in burns: Diagnosis and management

Burn wound infection (BWI) is a major public health problem and the most devastating form of trauma worldwide. Fungi cause BWI as part of monomicrobial or polymicrobial infection, fungaemia, rare aggressive soft tissue infection and as opportunistic infections. The risk factors for acquiring fungal...

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Autores principales: Capoor, Malini R., Sarabahi, Sujata, Tiwari, Vinay Kumar, Narayanan, Ravi Prakash
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Medknow Publication 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3038393/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21321655
http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/0970-0358.70718
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author Capoor, Malini R.
Sarabahi, Sujata
Tiwari, Vinay Kumar
Narayanan, Ravi Prakash
author_facet Capoor, Malini R.
Sarabahi, Sujata
Tiwari, Vinay Kumar
Narayanan, Ravi Prakash
author_sort Capoor, Malini R.
collection PubMed
description Burn wound infection (BWI) is a major public health problem and the most devastating form of trauma worldwide. Fungi cause BWI as part of monomicrobial or polymicrobial infection, fungaemia, rare aggressive soft tissue infection and as opportunistic infections. The risk factors for acquiring fungal infection in burns include age of burns, total burn size, body surface area (BSA) (30–60%), full thickness burns, inhalational injury, prolonged hospital stay, late surgical excision, open dressing, artificial dermis, central venous catheters, antibiotics, steroid treatment, long-term artificial ventilation, fungal wound colonisation (FWC), hyperglycaemic episodes and other immunosuppressive disorders. Most of the fungal infections are missed owing to lack of clinical awareness and similar presentation as bacterial infection coupled with paucity of mycology laboratories. Expedient diagnosis and treatment of these mycoses can be life-saving as the mortality is otherwise very high. Emergence of resistance in non-albicans Candida spp., unusual yeasts and moulds in fungal BWI, leaves very few fungi susceptible to antifungal drugs, leaving many patients susceptible. There is a need to speciate fungi as far as the topical and systemic antifungal is concerned. Deep tissue biopsy and other relevant samples are processed by standard mycological procedures using direct microscopy, culture and histopathological examination. Patients with FWC should be treated by aggressive surgical debridement and, in the case of fungal wound infection (FWI), in addition to surgical debridement, an intravenous antifungal drug, most commonly amphotericin B or caspofungin, is prescribed followed by de-escalating with voriconazole or itraconazole, or fluconazole depending upon the species or antifungal susceptibility, if available. The propensity for fungal infection increases, the longer the wound is present. Therefore, the development of products to close the wound more rapidly, improvement in topical antifungal therapy with mould activity and implementation of appropriate systemic antifungal therapy guided by antifungal susceptibility may improve the outcome for severely injured burn victims.
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spelling pubmed-30383932011-02-14 Fungal infections in burns: Diagnosis and management Capoor, Malini R. Sarabahi, Sujata Tiwari, Vinay Kumar Narayanan, Ravi Prakash Indian J Plast Surg Review Article Burn wound infection (BWI) is a major public health problem and the most devastating form of trauma worldwide. Fungi cause BWI as part of monomicrobial or polymicrobial infection, fungaemia, rare aggressive soft tissue infection and as opportunistic infections. The risk factors for acquiring fungal infection in burns include age of burns, total burn size, body surface area (BSA) (30–60%), full thickness burns, inhalational injury, prolonged hospital stay, late surgical excision, open dressing, artificial dermis, central venous catheters, antibiotics, steroid treatment, long-term artificial ventilation, fungal wound colonisation (FWC), hyperglycaemic episodes and other immunosuppressive disorders. Most of the fungal infections are missed owing to lack of clinical awareness and similar presentation as bacterial infection coupled with paucity of mycology laboratories. Expedient diagnosis and treatment of these mycoses can be life-saving as the mortality is otherwise very high. Emergence of resistance in non-albicans Candida spp., unusual yeasts and moulds in fungal BWI, leaves very few fungi susceptible to antifungal drugs, leaving many patients susceptible. There is a need to speciate fungi as far as the topical and systemic antifungal is concerned. Deep tissue biopsy and other relevant samples are processed by standard mycological procedures using direct microscopy, culture and histopathological examination. Patients with FWC should be treated by aggressive surgical debridement and, in the case of fungal wound infection (FWI), in addition to surgical debridement, an intravenous antifungal drug, most commonly amphotericin B or caspofungin, is prescribed followed by de-escalating with voriconazole or itraconazole, or fluconazole depending upon the species or antifungal susceptibility, if available. The propensity for fungal infection increases, the longer the wound is present. Therefore, the development of products to close the wound more rapidly, improvement in topical antifungal therapy with mould activity and implementation of appropriate systemic antifungal therapy guided by antifungal susceptibility may improve the outcome for severely injured burn victims. Medknow Publication 2010-09 /pmc/articles/PMC3038393/ /pubmed/21321655 http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/0970-0358.70718 Text en © Indian Journal of Plastic Surgery http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Review Article
Capoor, Malini R.
Sarabahi, Sujata
Tiwari, Vinay Kumar
Narayanan, Ravi Prakash
Fungal infections in burns: Diagnosis and management
title Fungal infections in burns: Diagnosis and management
title_full Fungal infections in burns: Diagnosis and management
title_fullStr Fungal infections in burns: Diagnosis and management
title_full_unstemmed Fungal infections in burns: Diagnosis and management
title_short Fungal infections in burns: Diagnosis and management
title_sort fungal infections in burns: diagnosis and management
topic Review Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3038393/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21321655
http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/0970-0358.70718
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