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Microsporidiosis (patient information)


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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Ahmed Younes M.B.B.CH [2]

Overview

Overview

Microsporidiosis is an infection caused by an organism called microsporidia. It usually affects immunocompromised individuals such as AIDS patients. Microsporidia can affect many systems but intestinal microsporidiosis is the most common form of the disease and causes diarrhea that can be chronic and debilitating. It is diagnosed through examination of stool samples and other body fluids. Medical and supportive therapy are the treatment options and the prognosis is good unless the patient is immunocompromised.

What are the symptoms of Microsporidiosis?

What are the symptoms of Microsporidiosis?

What causes Microsporidiosis?

What causes Microsporidiosis?

  • Microsporidiosis is caused by an organism called microsporidia.
  • Microsporidia are unicellular organisms and are obligatory intracellular meaning that it has to live inside the cell of the host to survive and multiply.
  • The exact method of transmission of microsporidia is not fully understood, but it is thought to be transmitted through inhalation or ingestion of the spores (which are the infective form of the disease).
  • When the organism lands inside the cell, it multiplies and eventually ruptures causing the release of spores.
Who is at highest risk?

Who is at highest risk?

  • People with suppressed immunity such as HIV patients and cancer patients are the most at risk individuals to have microsporidiosis.
Diagnosis

Diagnosis

  • Microsporidiosis is diagnosed through identification of the organism in the stool samples and other body fluid samples.
  • Identification of the specific species through the examination of stool samples is not possible.
  • However it can be achieved using more advanced methods such as PCR.
Treatment options

Treatment options

Prevention

Prevention

What to expect (Outlook/Prognosis)?

What to expect (Outlook/Prognosis)?

  • In healthy individuals, the prognosis is good and the disease is self-limiting.
  • In immunocompromised individuals, the disease is more dangerous and can be fatal.

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