Research Topic: Mucorales

Prevalence of fungi and their antifungal and disinfectant resistance in hospital environments: insights into combating nosocomial mycoses

This study examined fungal contamination in hospital intensive care units, finding that Aspergillus and other mold species are commonly present in air and ventilation systems. Importantly, many of these fungi have developed resistance to antifungal medications and hospital disinfectants, making them harder to treat and control. The researchers discovered that the same resistant fungi found in hospitals are similar to those infecting patients, suggesting that hospital environments may be spreading these dangerous infections.

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Comparison of the Filamentous Fungi Library v4.0 MALDI Biotyper Platform vs MSI-2 performance for identifying filamentous fungi from liquid cultures

This study compared two advanced technologies for identifying dangerous fungi in clinical samples. The MALDI Biotyper FFLv4.0 system identified about 96% of fungi correctly when using liquid culture samples, outperforming the MSI-2 database which identified about 78.5%. Both systems had difficulty with certain difficult-to-distinguish species, especially within Aspergillus and Fusarium groups, but performed well with Mucorales fungi. The findings suggest that continuous updating of these fungal identification libraries is essential for improving patient care.

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Unveiling species diversity within early-diverging fungi from China IV: Four new species of Absidia (Cunninghamellaceae, Mucoromycota)

Scientists discovered four new species of soil fungi called Absidia in Yunnan Province, China. These fungi were identified by examining their physical characteristics and genetic makeup, revealing they are closely related to but distinct from previously known Absidia species. Some Absidia species can produce useful compounds for industrial and medicinal purposes. This research adds to our understanding of fungal diversity in China’s temperate and subtropical regions.

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