Bisifusarium Delphinoides, an Emerging Opportunistic Pathogen in a Burn Patient with Diabetes Mellitus

Mycobiology. 2019 Jul 1;47(3):340-345. doi: 10.1080/12298093.2019.1628521. eCollection 2019.

Abstract

An 82-year-old man with diabetes was admitted to the emergency department with a third-degree burn on his left leg. The deep swab specimen from his left leg was cultured on Sabouraud dextrose agar without cycloheximide and incubated at 25 °C for 5 days. On the basis of morphological characteristics and multigene phylogenetic analyses of the internal transcribed spacer region of ribosomal DNA and partial fragments of beta-tubulin and translation elongation factor 1-alpha, the causal agent of fungal skin infection was identified as Bisifusarium delphinoides, which was newly introduced by accommodating a Fusarium dimerum species complex. Thus, we describe here the first case of skin infection caused by B. delphinoides on a burn patient with diabetes mellitus based on morphological observation and molecular analysis.

Keywords: Antifungal susceptibility; FDSC; opportunistic pathogen; phylogenetic analysis.

Grants and funding

This subject is supported by Korea Center for Disease Control and Prevention, the National Culture Collection for Pathogens with a funding assistance program of Specialized Pathogen Resource Banks [SPRB-2018-02].