Coccidioidomycosis (, ) is a mammalian mycosis caused by Coccidioides immitis or Coccidioides posadasii. It is commonly known as cocci, Valley fever, California fever,
Coccidioidomycosis is a common cause of community-acquired pneumonia in the endemic areas of the United States. Infections usually occur due to inhalation of the arthroconidial spores after soil disruption. The disease is not contagious. The infection may recur or become chronic.
It was reported in 2022 that Valley fever had been increasing in California's Central Valley for years (1,000 cases in Kern County in 2014, 3,000 in 2021); experts said that cases could rise across the American West as the climate makes the landscape drier and hotter. Article gives the judgment of a medical director and an Earth system scientist.
Valley fever is not a contagious disease. In some cases, the infection may recur or become chronic.
A minority (3–5%) of infected individuals do not recover from the initial acute infection and develop a chronic infection. This can take the form of chronic lung infection or widespread disseminated infection (affecting the meninges, soft tissues, joints, and bone). Chronic infection is responsible for most of the morbidity and mortality. Chronic fibrocavitary disease is manifested by cough (sometimes productive of mucus), fevers, night sweats, and weight loss. Osteomyelitis, including involvement of the spine, and meningitis may occur months to years after initial infection. Severe lung disease may develop in HIV-infected persons.
A particularly severe case of meningitis caused by Valley fever in 2012 initially received several incorrect diagnoses, such as sinus infections and cluster headaches. The patient could not work during the diagnosis and the original search for treatments. Eventually, the right treatment was found—albeit with severe side effects—requiring four pills a day and medication administered directly into the brain every 16 weeks.
Rain starts the cycle of initial growth of the fungus in the soil. In soil (and in Agar plate), Coccidioides exist in filament form. It forms in both horizontal and vertical directions. Over a prolonged dry period, cells within hyphae degenerate to form alternating barrel-shaped cells (arthroconidia) which are light in weight and carried by air currents. This happens when the soil is disturbed, often by clearing trees, construction, or farming. As the population grows, so do all these activities, causing a potential cascade effect. The more land that is cleared and the more arid the soil, the riper the environment for Coccidioides. These spores can be easily inhaled unknowingly. On reaching alveoli, they enlarge in size to become spherules, and internal Cell division develop. This division of cells is made possible by the optimal temperature inside the body. Septations develop and form within the spherule. The rupture of spherules releases these endospores, which in turn repeat the cycle and spread the infection to adjacent tissues within the infected individual's body. Granulomas can form in the lungs surrounding these spherules. When they rupture, they release their contents into the bronchi, forming thin-walled cavities. These cavities can cause symptoms including Pleurisy, hemoptysis, and persistent cough. In individuals with a weakened immune system, the infection can spread fungemia. The fungus can also, rarely, enter the body through a break in the skin and cause infection.
With specific nucleotide primers, C. immitis DNA can be amplified by polymerase chain reaction (PCR). It can also be detected in culture by morphological identification or by using molecular probes that hybridize with C. immitis RNA. C. immitis and C. posadasii cannot be distinguished on cytology or by symptoms, but only by DNA PCR.
An indirect demonstration of fungal infection can also be achieved by serologic analysis detecting fungal antigen or host IgM or Immunoglobulin G antibody produced against the fungus. The available tests include the tube-precipitin (TP) assays, complement fixation assays, and ELISA. TP antibody is not found in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). TP antibody is specific and is used as a confirmatory test, whereas ELISA is sensitive and thus used for initial testing.
If the meninges are affected, CSF will show CSF glucose, an increased level of protein, and lymphocytic pleocytosis. Rarely, CSF eosinophilia is present.
From 1998–2011, there were 111,117 U.S. cases of coccidioidomycosis logged in the National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System (NNDSS). Since many U.S. states do not require reporting of coccidioidomycosis, the actual numbers may be higher. The United States' Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) called the disease a "silent epidemic" and acknowledged that there is no proven anticoccidioidal vaccine available. A 2001 cost-effectiveness analysis indicated that a potential vaccine could improve health as well as reducing total health care expenditures among infants, teens, and immigrant adults, and more modestly improve health but increase total health care expenditures in older age groups.
Raising surveillance and disease awareness while medical researchers develop a human vaccine can positively contribute to prevention efforts. Research demonstrates that patients from endemic areas who are aware of the disease are most likely to request diagnostic testing for coccidioidomycosis. Presently, Meridian Bioscience manufactures the so-called EIA test to diagnose the Valley fever, which however is known for producing a fair quantity of false positives. Recommended prevention measures can include type-of-exposure-based respirator protection for persons engaged in agriculture, construction, and others working outdoors in endemic areas. Dust control measures such as planting grass and wetting the soil, and also limiting exposure to dust storms are advisable for residential areas in endemic regions.
On the whole, oral fluconazole and intravenous amphotericin B are used in progressive or disseminated disease or immunocompromised individuals. Amphotericin B was originally the only available treatment, but alternatives, including itraconazole and ketoconazole, became available for milder disease. Fluconazole is the preferred medication for coccidioidal meningitis, due to its penetration into CSF. Intrathecal or intraventricular amphotericin B therapy is used if infection persists after fluconazole treatment. Itraconazole is used for cases of coccidioidomycosis infections that involve a person's bones and joints. The antifungal medications posaconazole and voriconazole have also been used to treat coccidioidomycosis. Because the symptoms of coccidioidomycosis are similar to those of common Influenza, pneumonia, and other respiratory diseases, public health professionals need to be aware of the rise of coccidioidomycosis and the specifics of diagnosis. Greyhound dogs often get coccidioidomycosis; their treatment regimen involves 6–12 months of ketoconazole taken with food.
The cost of the nephrotoxic AmB deoxycholate, in 2015, for a patient of at 1 mg/kg/day dosage, was approximately US$63.80, compared to $1318.80 for 5 mg/kg/day of the less toxic liposomal AmB.
Incidence varies widely across the West and Southwest. In Arizona, for instance, in 2007, there were 3,450 cases in Maricopa County, which in 2007 had an estimated population of 3,880,181 for an incidence of approximately 1 in 1,125. In contrast, though southern New Mexico is considered an endemic region, there were 35 cases in the entire state in 2008 and 23 in 2007, in a region that had an estimated 2008 population of 1,984,356,New Mexico Intercensal Population Estimates from the U.S. Census Bureau for an incidence of approximately 1 in 56,695.
Infection rates vary greatly by county, and although population density is important, so are other factors that have not been proven yet. Greater construction activity may disturb spores in the soil. In addition, the effect of altitude on fungi growth and morphology has not been studied, and altitude can range from sea level to 10,000 feet or higher across California, Arizona, Utah, and New Mexico.
In California from 2000 to 2007, there were 16,970 reported cases (5.9 per 100,000 people) and 752 deaths of the 8,657 people hospitalized. The highest incidence was in the San Joaquin Valley, with 76% of the 16,970 cases (12,855) occurring in the area. Following the 1994 Northridge earthquake, there was a sudden increase of cases in the areas affected by the quake, at a pace of over 10 times baseline.
There was an outbreak in the summer of 2001 in Colorado, away from where the disease was considered endemic. A group of archeologists visited Dinosaur National Monument, and eight crew members, along with two National Park Service workers, were diagnosed with Valley fever.
California state prisons, beginning in 1919, have been particularly affected by coccidioidomycosis. In 2005 and 2006, the Pleasant Valley State Prison near Coalinga and Avenal State Prison near Avenal on the western side of the San Joaquin Valley had the highest incidence in 2005, of at least 3,000 per 100,000. The Receivership appointed in Plata v. Schwarzenegger issued an order in May 2013 requiring relocation of vulnerable populations in those prisons.
The incidence rate has been increasing, with rates as high as 7% during 2006–2010. The cost of care and treatment is $23 million in California prisons. A lawsuit was filed against the state in 2014 on behalf of 58 inmates stating that the Avenal and Pleasant Valley state prisons did not take necessary steps to prevent infections.
Dr. William Ophüls, a professor at Stanford University Hospital (San Francisco), discovered that the causative agent of the disease that was at first called Coccidioides infection and later coccidioidomycosis was a fungal pathogen, and coccidioidomycosis was also distinguished from Histoplasmosis and Blastomycosis. Further, Coccidioides immitis was identified as the culprit of respiratory disorders previously called San Joaquin Valley fever, desert fever, and Valley fever, and a serum precipitin test was developed by Charles E. Smith that was able to detect an acute form of the infection. In retrospect, Smith played a major role in both medical research and raising awareness about coccidioidomycosis, especially when he became dean of the School of Public Health at the University of California at Berkeley in 1951.
Coccidioides immitis was considered by the United States during the 1950s and 1960s as a potential biological weapon.Ciottone, Gregory R. Disaster Medicine. Philadelphia, PA: Mosby Elsevier, 2006, pp. 726-128. The strain selected for investigation was designated with the military symbol OC, and initial expectations were for its deployment as a human incapacitant. Medical research suggested that OC might have had some lethal effects on the populace, and Coccidioides immitis started to be classified by the authorities as a threat to public health. Coccidioides immitis was never weaponized to the public's knowledge, and most of the military research in the mid-1960s was concentrated on developing a human vaccine. Coccidioides immitis is not on the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' or Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's list of and toxins.
In 2002, Coccidioides posadasii was identified as genetically distinct from Coccidioides immitis despite their morphologic similarities and can also cause coccidioidomycosis.
It was reported in 2022 that valley fever had been increasing in Central Valley of California for years (1,000 cases in Kern county in 2014, 3,000 in 2021); experts said that cases could rise across the American west as the climate and industrial agricultural practices make the landscape drier and hotter. The Coccidioides flourishes due to the oscillation between extreme dryness and wetness. The California Department of Public Health said the 9,280 new cases of Valley fever with onset dates in 2023 was the highest number the department has ever documented.
In cats, symptoms may include skin lesions, fever, and loss of appetite, with skin lesions being the most common.
Other species in which Valley fever has been found include livestock such as cattle and horses; llamas; marine mammals, including sea otters; zoo animals such as monkeys and apes, kangaroos, tigers, etc.; and wildlife native to the geographic area where the fungus is found, such as cougars, skunks, and .
Image:Spherule and endospore forms of Coccidioides immitis 01ee057 lores.jpg|Spherule and endospore forms of Coccidioides immitis
Image:Mature spherule with endospores of Coccidioides immitis PHIL 480.tif|Mature spherule with endospores of Coccidioides immitis
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