The impact of climate change on the epidemiology of fungal infections: implications for diagnosis, treatment, and public health strategies
- Author: mycolabadmin
- 2/11/2025
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Summary
Background
Anthropogenic climate change is reshaping ecosystems and creating conditions that affect 58% of all known human infectious diseases, including fungal infections. Rising temperatures, changing precipitation patterns, and extreme weather events are influencing fungal growth, distribution, and virulence, potentially expanding the geographic range of pathogenic fungi and exposing populations to novel, more virulent, or drug-resistant strains.
Objective
This review explores the intricate relationship between climate change and fungal infections, examining how environmental shifts impact fungal epidemiology, pathogen distribution, antifungal resistance, and host susceptibility. The analysis highlights clinical implications and the urgent need for policy development, educational initiatives, diagnostic enhancements, and novel therapeutic strategies to mitigate the growing burden of fungal infections.
Results
Conclusion
- Published in:Therapeutic Advances in Infectious Disease,
- Study Type:Review,
- Source: PMID: 39944519, DOI: 10.1177/20499361251313841