Research Topic: Coccidioidomycosis

Key Fungal Secreted Proteases in Coccidioidomycosis

Researchers studied how a dangerous fungus called Coccidioides causes disease by examining special proteins called proteases that the fungus secretes. They found that blocking these proteases prevented the fungus from forming the spherule structures that allow it to spread inside infected people. This discovery could lead to new treatments for coccidioidomycosis, a serious infection that affects people in the Southwest United States.

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Extensive erythematous plaques of fungal origin in an overseas student: Cutaneous manifestation of coccidioidomycosis

A 21-year-old student studying in Arizona developed unusual skin rashes months after returning to China. Doctors had difficulty diagnosing the condition because it lacked typical symptoms of the fungal infection coccidioidomycosis. By using multiple diagnostic methods including DNA sequencing and fungal culture, they identified the infection as caused by Coccidioides posadasii. When the initial antifungal drug didn’t work, testing showed the fungus was resistant, so they switched to a different antifungal called voriconazole, which successfully cured the infection after 12 months.

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