Treatment for Early, Uncomplicated Coccidioidomycosis: What Is Success?

Author:

Galgiani John N12,Blair Janis E3,Ampel Neil M123,Thompson George R4

Affiliation:

1. Valley Fever Center for Excellence, University of Arizona College of Medicine–Tucson, Tucson, Arizona, USA

2. Department of Medicine, University of Arizona College of Medicine–Tucson, Tucson, Arizona, USA

3. Division of Infectious Diseases, Mayo Clinic Hospital, Phoenix, Arizona, USA

4. Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Internal Medicine, University of California, Davis Medical Center, Sacramento, California, USA

Abstract

Abstract The care of primary pulmonary coccidioidomycosis remains challenging. Such infections produce a variety of signs, symptoms, and serologic responses that cause morbidity in patients and concern in treating clinicians for the possibility of extrapulmonary dissemination. Illness may be due to ongoing fungal growth that produces acute inflammatory responses, resulting in tissue damage and necrosis, and for this, administering an antifungal drug may be of benefit. In contrast, convalescence may be prolonged by other immunologic reactions to infection, even after fungal replication has been arrested, and in those situations, antifungal therapy is unlikely to yield clinical improvement. In this presentation, we discuss what findings are clinical indicators of fungal growth and what other sequelae are not. Understanding these differences provides a rational management strategy for deciding when to continue, discontinue, or reinstitute antifungal treatments.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Microbiology (medical)

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