Candida parapsilosis

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Candida parapsilosis
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Ascomycota
Class: Pichiomycetes
Order: Serinales
Family: Debaryomycetaceae
Genus: Candida
Species:
C. parapsilosis
Binomial name
Candida parapsilosis
Langeron & Talice (1932)
Synonyms

Candida parapsilosis is a fungal species of yeast that has become a significant cause of sepsis and of wound and tissue infections in immunocompromised people. Unlike Candida albicans and Candida tropicalis, C. parapsilosis is not an obligate human pathogen, having been isolated from nonhuman sources such as domestic animals, insects and soil.[1] C. parapsilosis is also a normal human commensal and it is one of the fungi most frequently isolated from human hands.[1] There are several risk factors that can contribute to C. parapsilosis colonization. Immunocompromised individuals and surgical patients, particularly those undergoing surgery of the gastrointestinal tract, are at high risk for infection with C. parapsilosis.[1] There is currently no consensus on the treatment of invasive candidiasis caused by C. parapsilosis, although the therapeutic approach typically includes the removal of foreign bodies such as implanted prostheses and the administration of systemic antifungal therapy. amphotericin B and fluconazole are often used in the treatment of C. parapsilosis infection.[1]

Candida parapsilosis was discovered in Puerto Rico in 1928 by Ashford from a diarrheal stool. It was first named Monilia parapsilosis and considered nonpathogenic.[1] It was later encountered as a causative agent of sepsis in an intravenous drug user in 1940.[1] It is now considered an important, emerging nosocomial pathogen.[2] C. parapsilosis is the most common non-C. albicans species of Candida[3] and the second most common pathogen in superficial candidiasis after C. albicans.[4]

Biology

Disease

References

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