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Article
Attempted isolation of Cryptococcus species and incidental isolation of Exophiala dermatitidis from human oral cavities
Mycopathologia
  • Caroline P Toberna, Advocate Aurora Health
  • Jessica J F Kram, Advocate Aurora Health
  • Eric T Beck, Advocate Aurora Health
  • Sommer Ray
  • Tyler Gavinski
  • Alana K Sterkel
  • Dennis Baumgardner, Advocate Aurora Health
Affiliations

Aurora University of Wisconsin Medical Group, Advocate Aurora Research Institute, ACL Laboratories, Advocate Aurora Health

Publication Date
12-1-2020
Abstract

Recent molecular studies suggest that Cryptococcus may inhabit the normal human mouth. We attempted to isolate Cryptococcus from 21 adult non-acutely ill patients and 40 volunteer medical and non-medical staff in Southeastern Wisconsin, USA. An upper lip sulcus culture and an oral rinse specimen were inoculated separately onto Staib (birdseed) agar containing chloramphenicol and incubated in gas impermeable zip lock bags at 35 °C. No cryptococci were grown from any of the 122 samples from the 61 subjects. Both specimens from a woman with no risk factors for fungal disease yielded a black yeast at 4 days on Staib agar. This isolate was shown to be Exophiala dermatitidis by colony and microscopic morphology, analysis by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry, and sequencing through the internal transcribed spacer ribosomal RNA gene. This appears to be a novel isolation of E. dermatitidis from the oral cavity of a generally healthy human.

Document Type
Article
PubMed ID
32949296
Citation Information

Toberna CP, Kram JJF, Beck ET, et al. Attempted isolation of cryptococcus species and incidental isolation of exophiala dermatitidis from human oral cavities. Mycopathologia. 2020;185(6):1051-1055. doi: 10.1007/s11046-020-00490-5