Coniochaeta Mutabilis
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| Morphology | Fungi. Dark brown to black ascomata with setae, or pink salmon to dark brown colonies producing phialidic conidiogenous cells. | 
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| Disease | In humans, only a few cases of ocular C. mutabilis infections have been reported. It has been described to be a causative agent of human peritonitis, endocarditis, endophthalitis, and keratitis. | 
| Zoonosis | Possibly. The case of ocular infection first presented in domestic fowl (chicken with ocular infection). | 
| Host Range | Humans, wood, water, soil, possible animals. | 
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| Modes of Transmission  | Unknown. Acknowledging unusual modes of transmission may help bring this differential
                                          diagnosis into consideration. | 
| Signs and Symptoms | For the eye infection case, corneal ulcer following a week of increasing eye pain. Another human sample was derived from pus from a mass over an ankle. | 
| Infectious Dose | Unknown. | 
| Incubation Period | Unknown. For the eye infection case, two weeks. | 
| Prophylaxis | None available. | 
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| Vaccines | None available. | 
| Treatment | A course of oral, topical, intrastromal, and intracameral antifungals. Amphotericin B. | 
| Surveillance | Monitor for symptoms.  | 
| MSU Requirements  | Report any exposures.  | 
| Laboratory Acquired Infections (LAIs) | None have been reported. | 
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| Sources | Cultures, frozen stocks, other samples described in IBC protocol. | 
| BMBL | https://www.cdc.gov/labs/bmbl/?CDC_AAref_Val=https://www.cdc.gov/labs/BMBL.html | 
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| NIH Guidelines | |
| CDC | https://www.cdc.gov/fungal/?CDC_AAref_Val=https://www.cdc.gov/fungal/features/fungal-infections.html | 
| Risk Group 2 | Agents that are associated with human disease which is rarely serious and for which preventive or therapeutic interventions are often available. | 
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| BSL2 | For all procedures involving suspected or known infectious specimen or cultures. | 
| ABSL2 | For all procedures utilizing infected animals. | 
| Small | Notify others working in the lab. Remove PPE and don new PPE. Cover area of the spill
                                                with absorbent material and add fresh 1:10 bleach:water. Allow 20 munutes (or as directed)
                                                of contact time. After 20 minutes, cleanup and dispose of materials. | 
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| Large | 
 | 
| Mucous membrane  | Flush eyes, mouth, or nose for 5 minutes at eyewash station. | 
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| Other Exposures  | Wash area with soap and water for 5 minutes.  | 
| Reporting | Immediately report incident to supervisor, complete a First Report of Injury form, and submit to Safety and Risk Management. | 
| Medical Follow-up  | During business hours: Bridger Occupational Health 3406 Laramie Drive. Weekdays 8am -6pm.  Weekends 9am-5pm After business hours: Bozeman Deaconess Hospital Emergency Room 915 Highland Blvd Bozeman, MT | 
| Disinfection | Susceptible to 1:10 bleach:water plus cleaning of killed spores, 70 % ethanol | 
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| Inactivation | Inactivated by moist heat (15 minutes at 121oC) and dry heat (1 hour at 160-170oC). | 
| Survival Outside Host  | Unknown. | 
| Minimum PPE Requirements | Lab coat, disposable gloves, safety glasses, closed toed shoes, long pants | 
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| Additional Precautions | Additioanl PPE may be required depending on lab specific SOPs and IBC Protocol. | 
