A fungal culture test helps diagnose fungal infections. Fungal infections may happen if you are exposed to fungi (more than one fungus). Fungi are plant-like life forms, such as yeasts and molds. Fungi live everywhere:
- Outdoors in air and soil and on plants
- Indoors on surfaces and in the air
- On your skin and inside your body
Normally, if you are healthy, fungi will not make you sick. But there are a few hundred types of fungi that can affect your health. There are two main types of fungal infections:
Superficial fungal infections affect the outside of your body, including your skin, genital area, and nails. They are very common. Usually, these fungal infections aren't serious, but they can cause itchy, scaly rashes, and other uncomfortable conditions. Examples of superficial fungal infections include:
- Athlete's foot
- Vaginal yeast infections
- Jock itch
- Ringworm, which causes a circle-shaped rash on the skin that looks like a coiled worm
Systemic fungal infections affect tissue inside your body. The fungus may grow in your lungs, blood, and other organs, including your brain. Anyone can get a systemic fungal infection, but they are less common in healthy people. In healthy people, the infection begins slowly and usually doesn't spread to other organs.
The most serious systemic fungal infections happen in people who have medical conditions that weaken the immune system or need treatment that affects the immune system. These infections tend to spread faster and affect more than one part of the body.
Examples of systemic fungal infections include:
- Aspergillosis.
- Histoplasmosis.
- Pneumocystis pneumonia.
- Sporothrix schenckii, or "rose gardener's disease," a fungus that lives in soil and on plants and enters the skin through small cuts and scrapes. It can affect the skin, lungs, joints, and nervous system.
Both superficial and systemic fungal infections can be diagnosed with a fungal culture test.