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1.
Pathogens ; 12(11)2023 Oct 31.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38003768

RESUMO

Cryptococcosis is an invasive fungal infection found worldwide that causes significant morbidity and mortality among a broad range of hosts. There are approximately 223,000 new cases of cryptococcosis annually throughout the world, and at least 180,000 deaths are attributed to this infection each year. Most of these are due to complications of cryptococcal meningoencephalitis among HIV-infected patients in resource-limited environments. The majority of individuals diagnosed with cryptococcosis have underlying conditions associated with immune dysfunction such as HIV, solid organ transplant, hematologic malignancy, organ failure syndromes, and/or the use of immunosuppressive agents such as glucocorticosteroids and biologic agents. In most clinical series, there is a small proportion of patients with cryptococcosis who are phenotypically normal; that is, they have no clinically obvious predisposition to disease. Cryptococcal meningoencephalitis (CME) presentation and management differ substantially between these normal individuals and their immunocompromised counterparts. In this review, we will focus on CME in the phenotypically normal host and underscore differences in the clinical presentation, management, outcome, and potential risk factors for these patients compared to immunocompromised persons who develop this potential devastating invasive fungal infection.

2.
Brain Sci ; 12(4)2022 Apr 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35448026

RESUMO

Having a parent with Alzheimer's disease (AD) and related dementias confers a risk for developing these types of neurocognitive disorders in old age, but the mechanisms underlying this risk are understudied. Although the hippocampus is often one of the earliest brain regions to undergo change in the AD process, we do not know how early in the lifespan such changes might occur or whether they differ early in the lifespan as a function of family history of AD. Using a rare sample, young adults with a parent with late-onset dementia, we investigated whether brain abnormalities could already be detected compared with a matched sample. Moreover, we employed simple yet novel techniques to characterize resting brain activity (mean and standard deviation) and brain volume in the hippocampus. Young adults with a parent with dementia showed greater resting mean activity and smaller volumes in the left hippocampus compared to young adults without a parent with dementia. Having a parent with AD or a related dementia was associated with early aberrations in brain function and structure. This early hippocampal dysfunction may be due to aberrant neural firing, which may increase the risk for a diagnosis of dementia in old age.

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