Aspergillosis is an infection caused by mold (fungus). The infections caused by aspergillosis primarily affect the respiratory system, but their symptoms and severity vary widely.
Aspergillus, the mold that causes the infections, is found both indoors and outdoors. Most strains of this mold are innocuous, but a few might cause catastrophic infections when inhaled by persons with compromised immune systems, underlying lung disease, or asthma.
The spores cause an allergic response in some persons. Others suffer mild to severe lung infections. Invasive aspergillosis, the most deadly type of aspergillosis, arises when the infection spreads to blood vessels and beyond.
Treatment for aspergillosis may include monitoring, antifungal medicines, or, in rare situations, surgery.
WHAT ARE THE SYMPTOMS OF ASPERGILLOSIS?
Allergic reaction
- Fever
- A cough that may produce blood or mucus plugs
- Worsening asthma
Aspergilloma
- A cough that often produces blood (hemoptysis)
- Wheezing
- Breathing difficulty
- Unintentional weight loss
- Fatigue
Invasive aspergillosis
- Chills and fever
- A cough that produces blood (hemoptysis)
- Breathing difficulty
- Pain in the chest or joints
- Headaches or vision problems
- Skin blemishes
Other types of aspergillosis
WHAT ARE THE CAUSES OF ASPERGILLOSIS?
- Weakened immune system: People who are on immune-suppressing medicines following transplant surgery, particularly bone marrow or stem cell transplants, or who have specific blood malignancies are most vulnerable to invasive aspergillosis. People in the latter stages of AIDS may also be more vulnerable.
- Low white blood cell level: Chemotherapy, organ transplantation, and leukemia patients have reduced white cell counts, rendering them more vulnerable to invasive aspergillosis. Having chronic granulomatous disease, a hereditary illness that damages immune system cells, also helps.
- Lung cavities: People with air gaps (cavities) in their lungs are more likely to develop aspergillomas.
- Asthma or cystic fibrosis: People with asthma and cystic fibrosis are more prone to develop an allergic reaction to aspergillus mold, especially if their lung issues are chronic or difficult to treat.
- Long-term corticosteroid treatment: Long-term corticosteroid treatment may raise the risk of opportunistic infections, depending on the underlying condition and other medicines administered.
WHAT ARE THE COMPLICATIONS OF ASPERGILLOSIS?
- Bleeding: Aspergillomas and invasive aspergillosis can both cause serious, and occasionally deadly, pulmonary hemorrhage.
- Systemic infection: The spread of the infection to other regions of your body, particularly your brain, heart, and kidneys, is the most significant consequence of invasive aspergillosis. Invasive aspergillosis spreads quickly and is potentially lethal.
HOW IS ASPERGILLOSIS DIAGNOSED?
- Imaging test: A chest X-ray or computed tomography (CT) scan — a form of X-ray that generates more precise pictures than traditional X-rays — may generally identify a fungal tumor (aspergilloma), as well as invasive aspergillosis and allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis.
- Respiratory secretion (sputum) test: A sample of your sputum is stained with a dye and tested for the presence of aspergillus filaments in this test. To assist confirm the diagnosis, the material is put in a culture that fosters mold growth.
- Blood and tissue tests: Skin, sputum, and blood tests may all be useful in confirming allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis. A little quantity of aspergillus antigen is injected into the skin of your forearm for the skin test. If your blood contains mold antibodies, you will develop a firm, red bump at the injection site. Blood tests check for high amounts of certain antibodies, which indicate an allergic reaction.
- Biopsy: In certain situations, a biopsy of tissue from your lungs or sinuses may be required to confirm a diagnosis of invasive aspergillosis.
WHAT ARE THE TREATMENTS FOR ASPERGILLOSIS?
- Observation: Simple aspergillomas seldom require treatment, and drugs are rarely useful in curing these fungal tumours. Aspergillomas that do not produce symptoms may instead be regularly monitored using a chest X-ray. If the illness worsens, antifungal drugs may be prescribed.
- Oral corticosteroids: The objective of treating allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis is to avoid the aggravation of existing asthma or cystic fibrosis. Oral corticosteroids are the most effective approach to do this. Antifungal drugs alone are ineffective for allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis, however they can be used with corticosteroids to lower the dose of steroids and improve lung function.
- Antifungal medicines: These medications are the mainstay of care for invasive pulmonary aspergillosis. Voriconazole, a newer antifungal medicine, is the most effective therapy (Vfend). Another alternative is amphotericin B.
All antifungal medications have the potential for major adverse effects, including kidney and liver damage. Antifungal medicine interactions with other treatments are also prevalent.
- Surgery: Because antifungal drugs do not penetrate an aspergilloma, surgery to remove the fungus mass is the preferred therapy when an aspergilloma causes pulmonary hemorrhage.
- Embolization: This technique prevents aspergilloma-caused lung hemorrhage. A radiologist inserts a catheter into an artery supplying a lung cavity where an aspergilloma is causing blood loss. The injected substance hardens, obstructing blood flow to the location and halting the bleeding. This therapy is temporary, but the bleeding is likely to resume.