Paracoccidioides
MICROBIOLOGY
- Paracoccidioides species - P. brasiliensis (also known as S1a and S1b), P. americana (PS2), P. restrepiensis (PS3), P. venezuelensis (PS4), P. lutzii, P. lobogeorgii and P. ceti (causes disease in dolphins)
 
- Geographic distribution: - Most cases occur in Brazil, but the range is as far north as Mexico. - P. brasiliensis, P. americana (PS2) and P. lutzi: found across South America.
- P. restrepiensis and P. venezuelensis: found in Colombia and Venezuela, respectively.
- Significant differences in annual incidence rates were reported among Brazilian states (range 0.7 to 40 cases per 100,000 inhabitants)[2].
 
 
- Most cases occur in Brazil, but the range is as far north as Mexico. 
- Ecological associations: Mostly in rural and peri-urban environments. - Humid, rainy, forested areas near rivers
- Agricultural (mainly coffee and tobacco crops)
- Armadillo hunting
- Large-scale construction projects (e.g., hydroelectric dams) that disturb soil.
 
- Morphology (dimorphic nature) - The mycelium phase (mold) is the form found in the environment and when samples are cultured at 25C. Hyphae and conidia.
- Yeast phase: This is the form found in tissues and body fluids and when samples are cultured at 37C
 
- Pathogenesis: - Infectious propagules (conidia) produced by the environmental mycelium phase are inhaled by accidental hosts (humans and armadillos are the main ones).
- The transition from the conidia to the yeast phase occurs in the lungs.- Most infected individuals will control infection with T cell-driven granuloma formation and will not develop clinical disease.
- The acute/subacute (“juvenile”) form occurs in children and young adults whose T cell responses cannot control the infection. - Occurs weeks to months after initial exposure.
 
- Chronic (“adult”) form: >80% of cases - Quiescent fungus in granuloma that had previously been controlled becomes active long after the initial infection.
 
- Predisposing factors:- Gender: The male-to-female ratio is ~22:1. One reason is that circulating estrogens inhibit the transformation of the aspirated conidia into yeast cells.
- Genetic variables: specific MHC antigens (HLA-A9, HLA-B13 and C4B*-Q0) and the IL12RB1 641AA genotype are associated with risk for developing the disease.
 
 
 
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Last updated: January 11, 2025
Citation
, Shmuel Shoham. "Paracoccidioides." Johns Hopkins ABX Guide, The Johns Hopkins University, 2025. Johns Hopkins Guides, www.hopkinsguides.com/hopkins/view/Johns_Hopkins_ABX_Guide/540737/all/Paracoccidioides. 
 S. Paracoccidioides. Johns Hopkins ABX Guide. The Johns Hopkins University; 2025. https://www.hopkinsguides.com/hopkins/view/Johns_Hopkins_ABX_Guide/540737/all/Paracoccidioides. Accessed October 31, 2025.
, S. (2025). Paracoccidioides. In Johns Hopkins ABX Guide. The Johns Hopkins University. https://www.hopkinsguides.com/hopkins/view/Johns_Hopkins_ABX_Guide/540737/all/Paracoccidioides
 S. Paracoccidioides [Internet]. In: Johns Hopkins ABX Guide. The Johns Hopkins University; 2025. [cited 2025 October 31]. Available from: https://www.hopkinsguides.com/hopkins/view/Johns_Hopkins_ABX_Guide/540737/all/Paracoccidioides.
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