Medical Mycology Journal
Online ISSN : 2186-165X
Print ISSN : 2185-6486
ISSN-L : 2185-6486
Original Articles
Detection of Mucor velutinosus in a Blood Culture After Autologous Peripheral Blood Stem Cell Transplantation : A Pediatric Case Report
Yumiko JoichiIkue ChijimatsuKyoko YaritaKatsuhiko KameiMizuka MikiMakoto OnoderaMasako HaradaMichiya YokozakiMasao KobayashiHiroki Ohge
Author information
JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

2014 Volume 55 Issue 2 Pages E43-E48

Details
Abstract

Filamentous fungi were detected in the blood culture of a one-year-old boy after autologous peripheral blood stem cell transplantation. The patient was suspected to have aspergillosis and received micafungin. Fungi were isolated on potato dextrose agar medium and incubated at 37℃ for 2-5 days. Grayish, cottony colonies formed. A slide culture showed a spherical sporangium at the tips of the sporangiophores. The fungus could have been a zygomycete. The zygomycete was isolated from three blood cultures. The antifungal drug was changed from micafungin to liposomal amphotericin B, which resulted in an improvement in the patient's symptoms. Growth was observed at 37℃, but not 42℃ in a growth temperature test. Gene sequence analysis identified the fungus as Mucor velutinosus. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first time M. velutinosus has been detected in Japan, and this case is very rare. Zygomycetes are known to be pathogens that cause fungal infections in immunodeficient patients such as those with leukemia. They are difficult to identify by culture and are identified at autopsy in many cases. Therefore, culture examinations should be performed for immunodeficient patients with the consideration of zygomycetes.

Content from these authors
© 2014 The Japanese Society for Medical Mycology
Previous article Next article
feedback
Top