Research Keyword: bronchiectasis

Aspergillus in Children and Young People with Cystic Fibrosis: A Narrative Review

Cystic fibrosis is a serious genetic disease affecting children that damages the lungs through chronic infections. Aspergillus, a common mold in the environment, colonizes the airways of CF patients and can cause additional lung damage. While new CFTR modulator medications have improved outcomes and reduced Aspergillus infections, more research is needed to better diagnose and treat fungal infections in children with CF.

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The 2024 International Society for Human and Animal Mycology (ISHAM)-ABPA working group guidelines: Transforming diagnosis and management of ABPA

ABPA is a serious lung disease that develops when the body overreacts to a common fungus called Aspergillus. New international guidelines help doctors better diagnose and treat this condition, which affects many people with asthma and cystic fibrosis. The guidelines make diagnosis easier by using simpler tests and lowering the thresholds for detecting the disease, and they provide clear treatment plans depending on how severe each patient’s disease is. These updated standards are especially important in countries like India where ABPA is very common.

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Clinical characterization of immunocompetent patients with Scedosporium detected in respiratory samples: A case series

This study examined eight elderly patients without compromised immune systems who had the fungus Scedosporium detected in their lungs. All patients had a condition called bronchiectasis, and most had previously suffered from MAC disease. The researchers found that in most cases, the fungus was just colonizing the lungs without causing active infection. The challenge for doctors is determining whether Scedosporium is simply living in the lungs or actively causing disease.

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ABPA in post-tuberculosis lung disease: A diagnostic pitfall or genuine entity?

After tuberculosis treatment, some patients develop fungal lung infections that can look very similar to an allergic fungal disease called ABPA. This editorial warns doctors that they need to be careful about diagnosing ABPA in tuberculosis patients because treating it with the wrong medications could make the fungal infection worse. The key difference is that true ABPA causes wheezing and asthma-like symptoms, while post-TB fungal infections cause cavities and scarring in the lungs.

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The 2024 International Society for Human and Animal Mycology (ISHAM)-ABPA working group guidelines: Transforming diagnosis and management of ABPA

Allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis (ABPA) is a serious lung condition that develops when people with asthma have an allergic reaction to Aspergillus fungus. New international guidelines now provide better ways to diagnose and treat this condition, making it easier for doctors to identify ABPA early and prescribe the right treatment to prevent serious lung damage like bronchiectasis.

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Aspergillus Bronchitis at Localised Mucus Plug in an Immunocompetent Patient

A 55-year-old woman developed a rare fungal infection called Aspergillus bronchitis in a mucus plug within her lung over a 9-year period. Although she was otherwise healthy with a normal immune system, the fungus gradually grew and eventually caused serious bleeding in her lungs. Doctors treated the bleeding with artery embolization and then surgically removed the affected lung tissue. The fungus was identified as Aspergillus udagawae, a type that is harder to treat with standard antifungal medications.

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