Thursday, July 11, 2013

The disease-causing fungi that lurk in your dishwasher

This fungus is pretty harmless, but its tiny cousins are not.
This fungus is pretty harmless, but its tiny cousins are not.

Researchers have found that dishwashers are particularly conducive to the growth and 

spread of disease-causing fungi. These fungi have been implicated in causing lung 

diseases and sometimes fatal infections, especially among those with weak immunity.

Fungi come in many different forms. According to a study published  the culprits in 

dishwashers are black yeasts (Exophiala), red yeasts (Rhodotorula), a white yeast (Candida 

parapsilosis), and some nasty moulds. These fungi make spores to survive in extreme 

environments, as well as to reproduce and spread. These spores are single-celled seeds 

that are very light and spread easily, through air or by clinging to moving things.

Species of Exophiala, have been shown to cause lung disease in patients with weak 

immunity, according to recovered clinical samples in the US. The mould Magnusiomyces 

capitatus can cause fatal infections in especially leukemia patients. Both red yeast, 

Rhodotorula, and the white yeast, Candida parapsilosis, are emerging disease-causing 

fungi, especially through infected catheters.

What makes fungi hard to deal with it is that they can survive almost anywhere and under 

extreme conditions. All they need is a little bit of moisture, even if it is in the form of humidity 

in the atmosphere.

It should not be surprising then that fungi prefer dishwashers. Not only are they damp and 

warm, the continuous use of detergents makes the environment favourably alkaline too. 

According to researchers, the rubber seals of dishwasher doors are the perfect places for 

these fungi. They are of course also found in natural environments like tropical rain forests, 

on tropical fruits, hot springs in Thailand, Japanese house baths and Turkish public baths.


In particular, species of the black yeast Exophiala and the mould Magnusiomyces capitatus 

also grow in high concentrations of salt, which tend to be maintained in dishwashers to avoid 

accumulation of calcium.

In the  study,  investigators sampled 189 dishwashers from around the world. The presence 

of some mould or yeast could be detected in about 62% of these samples. The researchers 

also found that the calcium-content of water seemed to play a role in the growth and 

persistence of the black yeasts in the dishwashers, which agreed with earlier evidence. 

Using scanning electron microscopy, they showed that black yeasts excreted polymeric 

substances that formed a tough bio-film protecting the fungi from excess heat and 

mechanical damage.

In the most recent study, Turkish investigators sampled 153 dishwashers, in addition to 

other appliances, and found similar results. Almost one in five dishwashers yielded fungi, 

mostly black yeasts. These researchers also studied the genetic signatures of these black 

yeasts, and found one type that had specialised in invading urban households.

To clarify, there is yet no direct relationship established between dishwashers and human 

fungal infections, but the health hazard exists. Today, many patients have weakened 

immunity; even healthy individuals may have some undetected impairment in immunity 

because of the environment we live in. There is evidence of association between mould-

infested “sick” buildings and human disease, especially respiratory illness. A continued co-

existence with the fungal jungle in one’s own household could become a serious public 

health concern.




ps- this is only for information, always consult you physician before having any particular food/ medication/exercise/other remedies.


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