Relationship of airborne fungal spores to epidemiological data on respiratory disease: a systematic review
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Jiménez Uribe, Dámaris A.; Acevedo Barrios, Rosa; Rubiano Labrador, Carolina; Cariñanos González, PalomaEditorial
Springer Nature
Materia
Aerobiology Bioaerosols Fungal spores Health effects
Fecha
2026-01-20Referencia bibliográfica
Jiménez-Uribe, D. A., Acevedo-Barrios, R., Rubiano-Labrador, C., & Cariñanos, P. (2026). Relationship of airborne fungal spores to epidemiological data on respiratory disease: a systematic review. Aerobiologia, 42(1). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10453-025-09890-w
Patrocinador
Colombia Consortium - (Open Access charge)Resumen
Exposure to fungal spores is associated
with various types of respiratory health problems,
and volumetric suction particle samplers have been
used to estimate their concentrations in the atmos
phere. This systematic review analyzes the sampling
of fungal spores in outdoor air worldwide and its
relationship to epidemiological data on respiratory
disease. Ninety-four studies were identified that met
the following inclusion criteria: They were original
studies published in English or Spanish between 2010
and 2024, used active volumetric impact samplers,
and identified the type of fungal spores in air. Most
of the studies were conducted in Europe, with a dura
tion of 1 to 2 years. The fungal taxa with the high
est records were Alternaria sp. and Cladosporium sp.
Only 13% of the studies correlated fungal spore con
centrations with epidemiological variables; however, 77% of these studies concluded that there is a clear
relationship between airborne fungal spore concentra
tion and the occurrence of respiratory symptoms in
the sensitized population. Therefore, this study pro
vides an elaborate review of recent airborne fungal
spore surveillance issues worldwide, attempting to
include different perspectives of recent research on
outdoor volumetric sampling, including epidemio
logical analysis.





