Arthrographis Infections in Humans—A Narrative Review
Afroditi Ziogou, Alexios Giannakodimos, Ilias Giannakodimos, Andreas G. Tsantes, Stella Baliou, Petros Ioannou, Georgia Vrioni, George Samonis

TL;DR
Arthrographis fungi can cause rare but serious infections, especially in immunocompromised individuals, and require prompt diagnosis and treatment.
Contribution
This paper provides a comprehensive review of all documented human cases of Arthrographis spp. infections, highlighting clinical and treatment patterns.
Findings
Arthrographis infections are rare but more common in immunocompromised individuals.
Amphotericin B is the most commonly used treatment, with a 19% overall mortality rate.
Fever and abscess formation are the most common clinical manifestations.
Abstract
Background: Arthrographis spp. are environmental fungi commonly found in soil and compost. Infections caused by Arthrographis species remain an uncommon clinical occurrence. Although these infections are infrequent in the general population, their incidence appears to be elevated among immunocompromised patients or those with significant comorbidities. Objectives: This review seeks to examine all documented human cases of Arthrographis spp. infections, with particular focus on aspects such as epidemiology, microbiological features, resistance patterns, therapeutic approaches and associated mortality rates. Methods: A narrative review was performed based on data obtained from the PubMed/MedLine and Scopus databases. Results: A total of 21 articles reported Arthrographis spp. infections in 21 patients. The mean age of affected individuals was 43.62 years, with 66.6% being male. A history…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNail Diseases and Treatments · Antifungal resistance and susceptibility · Fungal Infections and Studies
