Internal Medicine

(Wang) #1

0521779407-C04 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 14, 2007 20:37


428 Cryptococcus Neoformans

➣Urine – consider
➣Sputum – consider
➣Blood – most often positive in AIDS, indicative of extensive infec-
tion
■Serology
➣Cryptococcal antigen (CrAg) – detection of cryptococcal polysac-
charide capsular antigen is clinically very useful
➣False-positive results possible, but usually with titer <1:8
➣CSF and serum testing provides >90% sensitivity for CNS
cryptococcosis; CSF CrAg has better specificity; serum CrAg
specificity for non-CNS infections is lower
➣In HIV patients, a positive serum CrAg always prompts CSF eval-
uation
■Histopathology
➣Organisms easily detected in tissue specimens, especially with
special stains

Imaging
■CT or MRI helpful for defining ventricular system and evaluating
presence of hydrocephalus
■CNS imaging may reveal “cryptococcomas”
■CXR: without AIDS, resembles tumor; AIDS – lymphadenopathy,
pleural effusions, diffuse mixed interstitial and intra-alveolar infil-
trates

differential diagnosis
■Early CNS cryptococcosis may resemble other fungal infections,
tuberculosis, viral meningoencephalitis, or meningeal metastases
■Distinguish cryptococcal masses from other causes of intracranial
lesions: pyogenic, nocardial, aspergillomas, TB, toxo, lymphoma,
neoplasm
■Pulmonary disease hard to distinguish from PCP, tuberculosis,
Histoplasma capsulatum, others – bronchoscopy helps to clarify

management
What to Do First
■Examine CSF, manage high intracranial pressure by serial taps
or consult neurology/neurosurgery for possible shunting, begin
empiric therapy

General Measures
■Begin therapy with Amphotericin B
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