Abstract

From 1970 to 1993, a total of 93 endomf1p4es confirmed by post-mortem examination was diagnosed in the autopsy material of the Berlin Charité, a large hospital with an average of 1,500 hospital beds and maximum medical care. These comprised 51 candidoses (54.8%), 24 aspergilloses (36.6%), five cryptococcoses (5.4%), one zygomycosis, 1 trichosporosis and one coccidioidomycoses. This corresponded to 0.7% of the 13,375 decreased persons autopsied during this period. The frequency of autopsy was 85.3%. In 3,770 cases (2,418 adults and 1,352 children), brain dissection was performed. An adequate clinical putative diagnosis was made in only six out of 28 patients (18 adults, 10 children) with histologically confirmed cerebral mycosis [11 candidoses (39.3%), 10 aspergilloses (35.7%), five cryptococcoses (17.9%), one trichosporosis and one coccidioidomycosis]. About 80% of the mycoses of the CNS thus remained undetected while the patients were alive. Against the background of the continuing reduction in the frequency of autopsy in the Federal Republic of Germany, the observations made in the present paper underscore the demand for improved efficiency of mycological in-vivo diagnoses in the hospital and laboratory.

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