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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, November 2001, p. 4213-4218, Vol. 39, No. 11
0095-1137/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.39.11.4213-4218.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Isolation of a Nodulisporium Species
from a Case of Cerebral Phaeohyphomycosis
P.
Umabala,1
V.
Lakshmi,1,*
A. R.
Murthy,2
V. S. S. V.
Prasad,2
C.
Sundaram,3 and
H.
Beguin4
Departments of
Microbiology,1
Neurosurgery,2 and
Pathology,3 Nizam's Institute of
Medical Sciences, Hyderabad, Andhra Pradesh, India, and
Scientific Institute of Public Health, BCCM/IHEM Culture
Collection, Brussels, Belgium4
Received 16 March 2001/Returned for modification 30 May
2001/Accepted 8 July 2001
 |
ABSTRACT |
A fungal infection of the brain of a 55-year-old male patient is
reported. The lesion and involved fungus were located exclusively in
the right medial temporo-parietal region. The patient was successfully treated with surgical resection of the lesion and antifungal
chemotherapy. Few pathogenic dematiaceous fungi exhibit neurotropism
and can cause primary infection in the central nervous system (CNS).
The etiological agent is described as a Nodulisporium
species. To date Nodulisporium has never been reported as
an agent of CNS infection in humans.
 |
CASE REPORT |
A 55-year-old male patient was
admitted to the neurosurgery facility of Nizam's Institute of Medical
Sciences (NIMS), Hyderabad, Andhra Pradesh, India, with an admitting
diagnosis of right choroidal meningioma.
Two months prior to admittance to NIMS, the patient experienced rapid
deterioration of vision in the right eye along with associated numbness
in the right half of the face. For 1 year prior to admittance he had
also experienced difficulty in chewing food and intermittent episodes
of transient loss of consciousness associated with weakness on the
right side, mainly involving the limbs. The recovery time from such
episodes was about 1 to 2 h. There was no history of generalized tonic
or clonic seizures. He did not have a history of hypertension or
diabetes and was not on any medication.
A computerized tomogram (CT) of the brain was performed by the
referring hospital (Fig. 1). CT sections
5 mm thick were obtained in the posterior fossa, and CT sections 10 mm
thick were obtained thereafter, both before and after administration of
intravenous contrast (ionic contrast [40 ml of 76% Uro Video;
Bracco]). The scan revealed a large, irregularly shaped,
slightly hyperdense, densely enhancing lesion in the right medial
temporo-parietal region of about 44.3 by 33.2 mm. It showed a large,
irregular, hypodense white matter with surrounding edema. There
was a shift in the midline structures to the left. The ventricular
system and sulcal cerebrospinal fluid spaces were effaced more on the right. The overall impression was of a sphenoid meningioma in the right
medial temporo-parietal region with cerebral edema. With these clinical
details, the patient was referred to NIMS for further management.

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FIG. 1.
(Left) CT scan of the brain showing the large,
irregularly shaped, slightly hyperdense enhancing lesion in the right
medial temporo-parietal region, extending to the orbit and the
paranasal sinuses, with surrounding edema. (Right) CT scan of the brain
at another level showing clearly the mass effect produced by the
lesion, with shift of the midline structures to the left.
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The patient was conscious and coherent. There were no signs of anemia,
clubbing, or palpitation. His pulse and respiratory rate were within
the normal range. There was no lymphadenopathy or organomegaly.
The right eye showed exophthalmos, with no pupillary light
reaction and primary optic atrophy on fundus examination. The
left eye was normal. Paresis of the right fifth and sixth cranial
nerves was present. There was loss of motor and sensory components of the fifth cranial nerve. There were no other sensory or motor deficits.
The peripheral blood picture and biochemistry were within normal
limits. Hemoglobin was 13.5 g%, packed cell volume was 39%, and total leukocyte counts and differential counts were within normal
range. The test of anti-human immunodeficiency virus antibodies was
nonreactive. Blood urea and serum creatinine were 45 and 0.7 mg%,
respectively. The chest radiograph and two-dimensional
echocardiogram of the heart were normal. With a diagnosis of
right choroidal meningioma, the patient was scheduled for surgery and
excision of the tumor.
The tumor was approached by a right temporal craniotomy. During the
operation, a greyish white vascular lesion causing opening of
the Sylvian fissure and spreading along either side of the sphenoid
ridge into both the temporal and frontal areas was seen. The mass also
infiltrated the ipsilateral branches of the internal cerebral artery,
the middle cerebral artery, and the optic nerve. A provisional squash
(cytology) performed intraoperatively from the mass showed lymphocytes,
plasma cells, and foreign-body giant cells infiltrating collagenous
tissue with numerous fungal filaments. These features were reported to
be consistent with a fungal infection. A total excision of the mass was
performed, and the mass was subjected to histological and
microbiological analysis.
Histology.
The material submitted for histology consisted of
multiple grey-white firm tissue bits with areas of hemorrhages.
Multiple sections from the specimen stained with hematoxylin and eosin revealed fragments of collagenous tissue infiltrated by lymphocytes and
plasma cells along with numerous multinucleate giant cells. There were
extensive areas of necrotic foci consisting of thin, short, and
irregular fungal filaments distributed sparsely. Native tissue could
not be identified. The morphology of these filamentous structures
resembled those of Aspergillus hyphae on Gomori methenamine silver stain (Fig. 2). The mass was
reported as being suggestive of cerebral aspergillosis. The fungal
filaments did not show the presence of melanin pigment in their cell
walls.

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FIG. 2.
Thin, irregular, short hyphae of
Nodulisporium sparsely distributed in tissue. Shown is a
section of brain tissue stained with Gomori methenamine silver stain.
Magnification, ×350.
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Microbiology.
A direct microscopic examination and KOH mount
of the tissue revealed septate, dichotomously branching hyphae, and the
specimen was interpreted as probably belonging to the genus
Aspergillus. The specimen was inoculated onto (i) two slopes
of Sabouraud's dextrose agar (SDA) with antimicrobial agents
chloramphenicol and cycloheximide; (ii) two slopes of SDA without
antimicrobials; and (iii) a slope of brain heart infusion agar (BHI).
The SDA slopes were incubated at 28 and 37°C, while the BHI slope was kept at 37°C. Based on the histology and direct microscopy reports, the patient began a regimen of amphotericin B injection. He tolerated the injection well. There were no postoperative complications.
A postoperative CT scan showed only a minute residue of ring
enhancement of 1.5 to 2 mm (Fig.
3). At
the time of discharge,
the patient was experiencing persistent nerve
palsy involving
the right second, third, fourth, fifth, and sixth
cranial nerves.
The patient was requested to continue following
an amphotericin
infusion protocol with 50 mg (0.6 mg/kg of body
weight/day) of
amphotericin B, under a physician's care. A total
cumulative dose
of amphotericin up to 1.5 to 2.0 g was advised.
The patient continues
to report to the neurosurgery outpatient clinic
for review every
4 weeks and has shown steady improvement in the 1.5 years of follow-up.
Mycological examination.
After 3 days of incubation, growth of
a brown filamentous fungus was observed on all the SDA and BHI slopes.
The morphology of the branching conidiophores with single-cell conidia
with acuminate base did not correspond to the genus
Aspergillus or any commonly known dematiaceous fungus. For
definitive
identification of the fungal isolate, we sought the expert
assistance
of D. Swinne, Head of the Mycology Division, Prince
Leopold Institute
of Tropical Medicine, Antwerp, Belgium. The isolate
was forwarded
to H. Beguin at the Scientific Institute of Public
Health, IHEM
Culture Collection, Brussels, Belgium. After a thorough
and meticulous
examination, H. Beguin identified the isolate as
belonging to
the mitosporic genus
Nodulisporium.
The fungus was determined to be dematiaceous as it was dark in
color.
Cultures grew readily on any of the usual laboratory culture media. On
2% malt agar and oatmeal agar, at 25°C, the fungus
covered a
9-cm-diameter plastic petri dish within 1 week. Growth
at 37°C was
fast, reaching a diameter of 80 mm in 7 days. Growth
at 40°C was
slow, reaching only 5 mm after 1 week. The culture
did not grow at
45°C.
The colony was plane and velutinous, with irregular margins and
mycelium subsurface. The conidiogenous areas were scattered
over the
entire surface of the colony and were pale brownish,
near Isabelline
(color code, R. 65 [reference
18]). Stromata,
exudates,
and soluble pigment were absent. The reverse was a deeply
colored dark
brown, near dark mouse grey (color code, R. 119 [reference
18]).
The mycelium was composed of septate hyphae, about 2 to 3 (5.5)
µm (extreme value is shown in parentheses) in diameter, and
slightly
roughened. The conidiophores were erect, mononematous
(coindiophores
solitary), irregularly branched, flexuous (wavy,
not rigid), septate,
and becoming mid-brown in the apical part
with age. In general the
conidiophores were 120 to 200 µm tall,
2.2 to 3.3 µm wide, and
smooth, or, like the mycelium, they were
slightly roughened and often
studded with dark granules. Conidiogenous
cells were seen arising,
singly or more often in groups, laterally
or more frequently at each
branch terminus. They were elongate-clavate,
mostly 9.0 to 30.0 µm by
2.2 to 3.3 µm, with denticles closely
crowded at the tip of the cells
that became more or less slightly
swollen from repeated conidial
production (Fig.
4).

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FIG. 4.
Microscopic morphology of Nodulisporium. (A)
Unstained wet mount showing the dematiaceous nature of the fungus; (B)
Lactophenol cotton blue mount of the fungus showing slightly roughened,
erect, irregularly branched conidiophores, with denticles closely
crowded at the swollen tips of the conidiogenous cells and conidia.
Magnification (both panels), ×300.
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Conidia arose singly and successively on denticles at the tips of
conidiogenous cells; the first conidium was formed apically.
Subsequent
conidia were formed sympodially in more or less basipetal
succession,
forming heads. Conidia were pale brown and smooth,
5.5 to 7.7 µm (12)
by 3.3 to 4.4 (5.2) µm, dry, single celled,
and ellipsoidal, with a
flattened base indicating the former point
of attachment to
conidiogenous cell. There were no apparent morphological
differences in
the conidiogenous structures from colonies growing
on oatmeal agar
(Difco).
The conidium production on areas of the colony surface, the
conidiophores, and conidiogenesis were similar to those occurring
in
many anamorphs of
Hypoxylon Bull; more specifically they
were
similar to those occurring in the genus
Nodulisporium.
Discussion.
Among the subdivisions of infections of the
central nervous systems (CNS) the two following infections are due to
dematiaceous species: (i) rhinocerebral phaeohyphomycosis, a typical
secondary infection with airborne conidia which can germinate in the
sinus and grow into the brain (the cerebral involvement is typically secondary), and (ii) cerebral phaeohyphomycosis, a primary infection by
a fungus located exclusively in brain parenchyma, with the first
symptoms being of cerebral origin (14). In the latter case lungs are supposed to be the primary site of infection,
from where the fungus spreads via blood to the brain.
The main etiologic agents of infections of the CNS are
Cladophialophora bantiana (Sacc) de Hoog et al.,
Ramichloridium mackenziei Campbell et Al-Hedaithy,
Exophiala dermatitidis (Kano) de Hoog,
and
Ochroconis
gallopava (W. B. Cooke) de Hoog (
2,
8,
9,
13,
17).
Rhinocladiella atrovirens Nannfeldt also has
been
reported as a neurotropic pathogen (
7). Among these
agents
of phaeohyphomycosis, only the genera
Rhinocladiella
and
Ramichloridium form single-celled conidia by sympodial
growth on a pale brown
rachis with crowded conidium-bearing denticles
like the fungus
isolated from the present case. However, the isolated
fungus has
erect and branched conidiophores whereas these structures
are
absent or little differentiated from the vegetative hyphae in
Rhinocladiella. Conidiophores in
Ramichloridium
are unbranched.
Furthermore,
R. mackenziei is limited to the
Middle East (
14).
Among the genera with acropleurogenous conidia are also
Geniculosporium Chesters et Greenhalgh,
Dicyma
Boulanger,
Dematophora Hartig, and
Nodulisporium
Preuss (
11). The genus
Geniculosporium has
conidiogenous cells, usually with a long geniculate rachis.
In 1981, von Arx (
23) transferred
Hansfordia Hughes,
Basifimbria Subramanian et Lodha,
Gonytrichella Emotto et Tubaki, and
Puciola de
Bertoli to the genus
Dicyma, which has been
redescribed as
having smooth branched conidiophores, often partly
forming septae,
whip-like hyphae or cylindrical-clavate, ampulliform
cells (
24).
Dematophora, like
Geniculosporium, has sympodulosporous conidia
but forms
conidia in two rows in the apical fertile parts and
synnemata in
nature, unlike in cultures (
25). Finally, the form
genus
Nodulisporium that has swollen conidiogenous areas
(conidiogenous
cells denticulate, cylindrical to clavate) corresponds
to the
isolated strain. Moreover, branching patterns of conidiogenous
structures, i.e., profusely branched conidiophores and the tendency
to
produce more than two conidiogenous cells at each branch terminus,
are
also referable to
Nodulisporium (
15).
Nodulisporium was erected on the basis of two moniliaceous
species:
Nodulisporium album Preuss and
Nodulisporium
ochraceum Preuss. Subramanian restricted
Nodulisporium
to pale colored species
and placed the dematiaceous species in the
genus
Acrostaphylus Arnaud ex Subramanian (
22).
Greenhalgh and Chesters (
12) do
not accept this division,
based on pigmentation. Indeed, many
members of the
Xylariaceae family are hyaline at first and colored
later on
with age. Regardless of this, Subramanian from India
related two
Acrostaphylus species:
Acrostaphylus
hyperparasiticus Subram, with globose conidia, and
Acrostaphylus lignicola Subram,
with conidia oval to
elliptical up to 7 µm long (
22). These
two taxa do not
correspond to the present isolate. Later, two
other species, also
originating from India, were described as
Nodulisporium:
Nodulisporium indicum Reddy et Bilgrami (only related
two
Acrostaphylus species represented by the type culture
isolated
in 1967 from
Mangifera indica, but this culture
shows many chlamydospores
and arthroconidia, absent in the case strain)
and
Nodulisporium griseobrunneum Mehrotra (isolated from
soil in a Piper betel orchard).
The latter species only differs
from the present isolate in having
slightly larger (6.6 to 13 µm by
3.5 to 5.5 µm) conidia; but the
ability to grow at 37°C, the growth
rate, the colony color, and
the conidiophore morphology closely
resemble those of
N. griseobrunneum.
The fact that this strain isolated from brain tissues grows very
rapidly at 37°C is not a common occurrence. This characteristic
should not be ignored or overlooked in the protolog of the name
of a
species. The literature only refers to
N. cylindroconium de
Hoog (
4), of which the type culture had been isolated as
Tritirachium species by Evans (
10,
11) as a
strong thermotolerant
species with an optimal growing temperature at
40°C (growth to
a diameter of 35 mm within 10 days on malt agar)
(
14). The other
members of the genus
Nodulisporium also differ distinctly by the
size of the
conidia (mostly smaller), by the branching habit,
and by the appearance
of the colonies (
4,
5,
6,
10,
19,
20,
21,
26).
Nodulisporium is an anamorph also associated in nature with
many ascomycete species of the
Xylariaceae family,
especially
Hypoxylon. Ju and Rogers (
16) even
consider this anamorph as
a primary criterion for recognizing a
xylariaceous fungus as a
member of the genus
Hypoxylon.
Among these ascomycetes, some produce
conidia on areas of the entire
surface of the colony. This feature
occurs in the strain isolated in
the present study and it is more
characteristic in the
Hypoxylon species (
1). A few members
of this
genus are strictly host limited on various trees; others
are found on
dead branches or fallen trunks and logs, often accompanied
or preceded
by a
Nodulisporium state. Following the
International Code of Botanical Nomenclature (article 59), the legitimate
name
of a holomorphic species can be typified by only its teleomorph,
i.e., the morph characterized by ascospores in ascomycetous
fungi
(
12a). This situation is particularly true in
xylariaceous fungi
for which dual nomenclature exists, although not
used often, and
species are mostly described only under the
ascomycetous name.
Indeed the
Nodulisporium state frequently
disappears early in
the process of stromal development
(
12). This implies that most
keys are based on teleomorph
features only, the anamorphic state
being ignored or little
described

as "a
Nodulisporium-like anamorph,"
as "a
typical
Nodulisporium," or as referable to this genus by
the use of "
Nodulisporium state of ...." In culture,
ascigerous
stromata are absent, but some of these ascomycetes produce
conidia,
and then the identification of a
Xylariaceae
anamorph should be
compared with the asexual states that originated
from identified
teleomorphic
material.
The identification of this anamorphic isolate to the species level
remains problematic in spite of its unusual rapid growth
at 37°C,
which is an uncommon
characteristic.
The brain abscess was the only conspicuous pathology in this case
report. There were no sinusitis, no underlying disease prior
to the
infection, and no lesion outside the CNS. The portal of
entry of
infection has thus not been identified. Per H. Beguin,
this is the
first case of cerebral infection by
Nodulisporium and
the second case involving this fungal taxon in human disease.
Also,
Nodulisporium is for the first time being described here
as
a pathogenic agent of human infection. Cox et al. reported
the first
case of an allergic fungal sinusitis by the presence
of a persistent
Nodulisporium species in mucus in 1994 (
3).
However, there was no tissue invasion by the fungus in their
study.
Our isolate is preserved at the BCCM/IHEM Culture Collection (IHEM
16563).
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We sincerely appreciate the interest and efforts taken by H. Beguin
in identifying the fungal isolate and providing the relevant literature.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Microbiology, Nizam's Institute of Medical Sciences, Punjagutta,
Hyderabad-500 082, Andhra Pradesh, India. Phone: 91 040 425 6478. Fax: 91 040 331 0076. E-mail:
lgorthi{at}hotmail.com.
 |
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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, November 2001, p. 4213-4218, Vol. 39, No. 11
0095-1137/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.39.11.4213-4218.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.