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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2014 Sep 9.
Published in final edited form as: Semin Respir Crit Care Med. 2011 Dec 13;32(6):663–672. doi: 10.1055/s-0031-1295714

Table 1.

Fungi associated with pulmonary infections and their characteristic morphology in clinical specimens by direct microscopic examination

Fungal Group and Representative Pathogens Microscopic Morphology in Clinical Specimens
YEASTS

  Cryptococcus neoformans Spherical budding yeasts of variable size, 2–15 μm in diameter. Capsule may be present or absent. No hyphae or pseudohyphae.
  Trichosporon Hyaline arthroconidia, blastoconidia, and pseudohyphae, 2–4 by 8 μm.

MOULDS

Mucormycotinaa Broad, thin-walled, pausi-septate hyphae, 6–25 μm wide with non-parallel sides and random branches.
  Absidia
  Cunninghamella
  Mucor
  Rhizomucor
  Rhizopus
  Saksenaea

Hyaline Hyphomycetes
  Aspergillus Hyaline, septate, dichotomously branching hyphae of uniform width (3–6 μm).
  Acremonium
  Fusarium Aspergillus may produce conidial heads in specimens from cavitary pulmonary lesions. Adventitious conidiation may be visualized on histopathologic examination of some of the non-Aspergillus hyphomycetes.
  Paecilomyces
  Phialemonium
  Scedosporium
  Scopulariopsis
  Trichoderma

Dematiaceous Hyphomycetes
  Alternaria Pigmented (brown, tan, or black), septate hyphae, 2–6 μm wide.
  Bipolaris
  Curvularia
  Cladophialophora
  Dactylaria
  Exophiala
  Phialophora
  Ramichloridium
  Wangiella

OTHER

Dimorphic (geographically restricted) Fungi
  Blastomyces dermatitidis Large (8–15 μm diameter) thick-walled budding yeast cells. The junction between mother and daughter cells is typically broad-based. Cells may appear multinucleate.
  Coccidioides immitis Spherical, thick-walled spherules, 20–30 μm diameter. Mature spherules contain small, 2–5 μm diameter endospores. Released endospores may be mistaken for yeast. Arthroconidia and hyphae may form in cavitary lesions.
  Histoplasma capsulatum Small (2–4 μm diameter), intracellular, budding yeasts.
  Paracoccidioides brasiliensis Large (2–30 μm diameter), multiple-budding yeasts ; 12 or more narrow neck buds of variable size may arise from the mother cell.
  Penicillium marneffei Oval, intracellular yeast cells bisected with a septum (fission yeast).
  Sporothrix schenckii Elongated or “cigar-shaped” yeast cells of varying size (rare). Tissue reaction forms asteroid bodies.
  Pneumocystis jiroveci Cysts are round, collapsed, or crescent shaped. Trophozoites seen on staining with giemsa or immunofluorescent stains.
a

Moulds of the subphylum Mucormycotina, previously referred to as Zygomycetes