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      Coccidioidomycosis : A Descriptive Survey of a Reemerging Disease. Clinical Characteristics and Current Controversies

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          Risk factors for severe pulmonary and disseminated coccidioidomycosis: Kern County, California, 1995-1996.

          Surveillance for coccidioidomycosis (CM) and a case-control study for risk factors among adults were conducted in Kern County, California. From January 1995 through December 1996, 905 cases of CM were identified, for an annual incidence of 86 cases per 100,000 population. A total of 380 adults were enrolled in the case-control study: 77 had severe pulmonary disease, 33 had disseminated disease, and 270 control patients had mild disease. Independent risk factors for severe pulmonary disease included diabetes, recent history of cigarette smoking, income of < $15,000 per year, and older age. Oral antifungal therapy before hospitalization was associated with a reduced risk of CM pneumonia. Risk factors for disseminated disease were black race, income of < $15,000 per year, and pregnancy. Early treatment of CM with oral antifungal agents may prevent severe pulmonary disease in groups considered to be at high risk, such as elderly individuals, persons with diabetes, and smokers. Persons at risk for severe CM may benefit from vaccination once an effective CM vaccine is available.
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            Coccidioidomycosis: a reemerging infectious disease.

            Coccidioides immitis, the primary pathogenic fungus that causes coccidioidomycosis, is most commonly found in the deserts of the southwestern United States and Central and South America. During the early 1990s, the incidence of coccidioidomycosis in California increased dramatically. Even though most infections are subclinical or self-limited, the outbreak is estimated to have cost more than $66 million in direct medical expenses and time lost from work in Kern County, California, alone. In addition to the financial loss, this pathogen causes serious and life-threatening disseminated infections, especially among the immunosuppressed, including AIDS patients. This article discusses factors that may be responsible for the increased incidence of coccidioidomycosis (e.g., climatic and demographic changes and the clinical problems of coccidioidomycosis in the immunocompromised) and new approaches to therapy and prevention.
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              Is it ever safe to stop azole therapy for Coccidioides immitis meningitis?

              To determine 1) whether patients with coccidioidal meningitis who had achieved remission with oral azole therapy were cured and 2) when oral azole therapy could be discontinued in these patients.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Medicine
                Medicine
                Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
                0025-7974
                2004
                May 2004
                : 83
                : 3
                : 149-175
                Article
                10.1097/01.md.0000126762.91040.fd
                15118543
                30c301a5-44f9-4c7b-bfdb-043f93308cce
                © 2004
                History

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