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Yeasts from the oral cavity of children with AIDS: exoenzyme production and antifungal resistanceDOI: 10.1590/S1517-74912003000300004 Keywords: acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, child, antifungal agents. Abstract: the oral fungal microbiota of 30 children with aids, of both genders, aged from two to six years, receiving outpatient treatment, was evaluated and compared with that of a control group composed of 30 healthy subjects with matching ages and genders. virulence factors, such as exoenzyme production, and susceptibility to five antifungal agents using an e-test kit were evaluated. c. albicans predominated over other species in the aids group, showing a higher production of proteinase and phospholipase when compared with that observed in the control group. in this study few clinical manifestations of and low selectivity for c. albicans (23.3%) were observed in the aids group. the enzymatic studies showed that 53.8% of the aids strains were strongly positive whereas only 33.3% of the non-aids strains were positive. amphotericin b was the most effective drug among the antifungal agents tested against c. albicans. the frequency, selectivity and level of exoenzyme production by c. albicans suggest a higher pathogenicity in the aids children than in the control children.
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