Phenotypic Characterization of Candida species in Tertiary Care Hospital of Eastern Nepal

Authors

  • Kewal Shrestha Department of Microbiology, Nobel Medical College Teaching Hospital, Biratnagar, Nepal https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3863-8283
  • Kumari Ragani Yadav Department of Microbiology, Nobel Medical College Teaching Hospital, Biratnagar, Nepal
  • Ganesh Kumar Singh Department of Microbiology, Nobel Medical College Teaching Hospital, Biratnagar, Nepal
  • Sujit Kumar Bhattacharjee Department of Microbiology, Nobel Medical College Teaching Hospital, Biratnagar, Nepal

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3126/jonmc.v11i2.50463

Keywords:

Candida albicans, Candida tropicalis, Culture media

Abstract

Background: Candida albicans is one of the most frequently isolated yeast in clinical laboratories and studies have shown that it accounts for up to 80% of the yeast recovered from the site of infection. Candida species have emerged as significant opportunistic fungal pathogens and the conventional methods of yeast identification are reported to be cumbersome with delayed diagnosis and initiation of treatment. Thus rapid identification and speciation of Candida species is essential in clinical laboratories.

Materials and Methods: A hospital based cross sectional study was carried out in the department of microbiology, Nobel medical college from January 2020 to December 2020. Approval was acquired from the Institutional Review Committee. Various clinical specimens were obtained and identification as per the standard microbiological procedures. Data were analyzed by SPSS, version 20.

Results: A total of 62 Candida species were isolated out of which 65% were from male and 35% were from female patients. Candida albicans was found to be the most common species with 68%. The highest incidence was seen in the age group below 20 years and 21 – 40 years with  32.25% cases each followed by 41-60 years with 20.96% cases. Among 62 specimens, urine samples yielded the highest number of Candida species 48.38% followed by sputum samples with 29.03% Candida species. High vaginal swab (HVS) yielded 12.9% Candida species and blood samples yielded 9.67% Candida species.

Conclusion: Candida albicans is still the most significant clinically but other non albicans are also emerging significant pathogens and warrant routine discrimination in clinical laboratories.

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Author Biography

Kewal Shrestha, Department of Microbiology, Nobel Medical College Teaching Hospital, Biratnagar, Nepal

Lecturer

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Published

2022-12-31

How to Cite

Shrestha, K., Yadav, K. R., Singh, G. K., & Bhattacharjee, S. K. (2022). Phenotypic Characterization of Candida species in Tertiary Care Hospital of Eastern Nepal. Journal of Nobel Medical College, 11(2), 57–61. https://doi.org/10.3126/jonmc.v11i2.50463

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Section

Original Articles