Candidiasis
Basics
Description
Candidiasis is an infection caused by species of the yeast Candida resulting in a wide spectrum of disease.
- Mucocutaneous infections include oral thrush, vaginitis, and infections of skin folds as well as esophagitis or laryngitis.
- Invasive disease includes bloodstream infection or candidemia, disseminated candidiasis, endocarditis, central nervous system (CNS) infection, osteomyelitis, and catheter-associated peritonitis and urinary tract infections.
Epidemiology
- Candida species are common, ubiquitous yeast. Candida albicans is part of the normal human microbiome and lives on the skin, in the mouth, intestinal tract, and vaginal mucosa.
- Vulvovaginitis is associated with pregnancy and can be transmitted to the newborn infant in utero, during delivery or after birth.
- Neonatal thrush and vaginal candidiasis occur mainly in healthy hosts.
- Candidiasis is an opportunistic infection.
- Invasive disease and chronic or recurrent mucocutaneous disease are associated with AIDS, primary immunodeficiency, and cancer treatment.
- Person-to-person transmission is rare.
- The incubation period is unknown.
- Oral candidiasis occurs in 5–7% of normal newborns and about 20% of persons with AIDS or cancer.
- Genital or vulvovaginal candidiasis is very common with nearly 75% of women reporting at vaginal yeast infection.
- Invasive candidiasis is a common health care associated infection with ~46,000 U.S. cases a year.
Risk Factors
- General risk factors:
- Corticosteroid use
- Broad-spectrum antibiotic use
- Diabetes mellitus
- AIDS
- Cancer chemotherapy
- Neutrophil defects
- Organ transplantation
- Oral thrush
- Occurs mainly in babies in the 1st month of life, the elderly, and persons with immune compromise
- Candida may live on oral devices like bottle nipples, pacifiers, and dentures causing recurrent or prolonged infection.
- Intertriginous candidiasis is associated with obesity.
- Genital candidiasis is more common in pregnancy.
- Invasive candidiasis is often a health care–associated infection and is associated with central venous catheters, intensive care unit (ICU) stay, dialysis, renal failure, and gastrointestinal surgery.
General Prevention
- Clean bottles, nipples, and pacifiers in hot water.
- Avoid unnecessary antibiotic use and limit antibiotic duration.
- Remove indwelling catheters as soon as possible.
- Hospitals should use bundles to prevent catheter infections. Consider daily chlorhexidine baths.
- Ensure proper hygiene with urine catheters and peritoneal dialysis catheters.
Pathophysiology
- Candida species are yeast that reproduce via budding.
- Mucocutaneous disease is typically caused by the hosts own organisms.
- Changes in vaginal pH or hormonal changes may predispose to genital disease.
- Oral and skin infections occur when diseases like cancer or diabetes or medications like antibiotics or steroids cause imbalance in the normal environment.
- Invasive disease occurs when Candida species enter the bloodstream and spread through the body. Invasive infection is typically health care–associated and related to catheter use including blood stream central venous lines, urinary and peritoneal catheters.
Etiology
- >15 species of Candida cause human disease with 95% of infections caused by C. albicans, Candida glabrata, Candida tropicalis, Candida parapsilosis, and Candida krusei. Candida spp. may cause disease at any site.
- Superficial infections include thrush or oropharyngeal candidiasis and diaper dermatitis both of which are most common in infancy and intertriginous candidiasis which occurs in skinfolds generally in healthy patients with chronic moisture, recent antibiotic use, or obesity.
- Esophagitis results in mucosal irregularities and swallowing difficulty and is seen with primary immune deficiencies and is an AIDS defining illness.
- Chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis is caused by a T-cell defect resulting in decreased production of Candida-specific antibody resulting in a superficial infection of the skin, hair, mucous membranes, and nails.
- Congenital cutaneous candidiasis is a rare ascending infection into the uterus prior to birth that causes a diffuse red rash.
- Invasive candidiasis may be isolated to the blood stream; that is, candidemia or disseminated candidiasis with fungal invasion of the liver, spleen, bone, kidneys, and/or brain. Fungal sepsis may occur.
Commonly Associated Conditions
- Diabetes mellitus
- Cancer
- Organ transplant
- Primary neutropenia
- AIDS
- Obesity
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Citation
Cabana, Michael D., editor. "Candidiasis." 5-Minute Pediatric Consult, 8th ed., Wolters Kluwer, 2019. Pediatrics Central, peds.unboundmedicine.com/pedscentral/view/5-Minute-Pediatric-Consult/617144/all/Candidiasis.
Candidiasis. In: Cabana MDM, ed. 5-Minute Pediatric Consult. Wolters Kluwer; 2019. https://peds.unboundmedicine.com/pedscentral/view/5-Minute-Pediatric-Consult/617144/all/Candidiasis. Accessed December 26, 2024.
Candidiasis. (2019). In Cabana, M. D. (Ed.), 5-Minute Pediatric Consult (8th ed.). Wolters Kluwer. https://peds.unboundmedicine.com/pedscentral/view/5-Minute-Pediatric-Consult/617144/all/Candidiasis
Candidiasis [Internet]. In: Cabana MDM, editors. 5-Minute Pediatric Consult. Wolters Kluwer; 2019. [cited 2024 December 26]. Available from: https://peds.unboundmedicine.com/pedscentral/view/5-Minute-Pediatric-Consult/617144/all/Candidiasis.
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