Erschienen in:
01.04.2008 | Letter
Discriminating invasive fungal infection from colonization
verfasst von:
Stijn Blot, Koenraad Vandewoude, Dirk Vogelaers
Erschienen in:
Critical Care
|
Ausgabe 2/2008
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Excerpt
We read with interest the article by Xie and colleagues reporting the impact of invasive fungal infection (IFI) on outcomes [
1]. In a cohort of 318 intensive care unit patients with severe sepsis they found 90 patients with IFI (28.3%). Ninety-three per cent of the IFIs were caused by
Candida species, 3% by
Aspergillus species and 4% were unclassified. Predominant sites of infection were the lung (56.4%) and the abdomen (22.7%). As such,
Candida pneumonia was the most frequent type of infection in this cohort, representing 53.6% of all IFIs (we assume that all cases of aspergillosis were pulmonary). This is most remarkable as the presence of
Candida in respiratory tract cultures is seldom pathogenic and
Candida pneumonia is considered a rare disease entity in which the diagnosis can only be made by histological confirmation [
2]. The same remark is valid for intra-abdominal IFI. The presence of
Candida from intraabdominal cultures does not necessarily represent
Candida peritonitis [
3]. …