Results 71 to 80 of about 181 (115)
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Adiaspiromycosis treated successfully with ketoconazole
Medical Mycology, 1989We describe a case of adiaspiromycosis in a 37-year-old male Caucasian. This is the first reported case with diffuse involvement of both lungs in a severely ill patient treated successfully with antifungal chemotherapy.
L C, Severo +3 more
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Disseminated adiaspiromycosis in a patient with AIDS
Medical Mycology, 1993A case of disseminated adiaspiromycosis in an AIDS patient is described. The most notable characteristic of the infection was the extensive osteomyelitis exhibited by the patient. Positive cultures for Chrysosporium parvum var. parvum were obtained from pus taken from a lesion of the wrist during surgery as well as from sputum samples and a bone marrow
E, Echavarria, E L, Cano, A, Restrepo
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Adiaspiromycosis in Czechoslovakian mammals
Medical Mycology, 1977The examination of 46 mammalian species in Czechoslovakia revealed adiaspiromycosis caused by the Emmonsia crescens in 22 species of free living animals; E. parva was the etiological agent in 3 species. The disease was most frequently found in carnivores of the family Mustelidae.
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The American Journal of Surgical Pathology, 1993
Adiaspiromycosis (ad"i-ah-spi"ro-mi-kósis) is a worldwide, noninfectious, nonarthropod transmitted fungal infection of lower vertebrates, most commonly rodents. Humans become an accidental host by inhaling dust-borne spores (conidia) of the saprophytic soil fungus, Emmonsia crescens (recently renamed Chrysosporium parvum variety crescens). We report 11
D M, England, L, Hochholzer
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Adiaspiromycosis (ad"i-ah-spi"ro-mi-kósis) is a worldwide, noninfectious, nonarthropod transmitted fungal infection of lower vertebrates, most commonly rodents. Humans become an accidental host by inhaling dust-borne spores (conidia) of the saprophytic soil fungus, Emmonsia crescens (recently renamed Chrysosporium parvum variety crescens). We report 11
D M, England, L, Hochholzer
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Fulminant Disseminated Pulmonary Adiaspiromycosis in Humans
American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1992A case of fulminant disseminated pulmonary adiaspiromycosis is reported. The patient, a 35-year-old black male farm worker, presented with a four-week history of generalized weakness, unproductive cough, evening fever, and a weight loss of 8 kg. He died 12 days after hospitalization of respiratory failure due to granulomatous lung disease. The clinical
Luiz Cesar Peres +1 more
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ADIASPIROMYCOSIS IN STRIPED SKUNKS IN ALBERTA, CANADA
Journal of Wildlife Diseases, 1986Pulmonary adiaspiromycosis was diagnosed in seven of 25 striped skunks (Mephitis mephitis) in east-central Alberta. The infection varied from mild, where only microscopic lesions were seen, to severe, where gross lesions of grayish-white nodules were observed in the lung parenchyma.
M A, Albassam +3 more
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Adiaspiromycosis in large free living carnivores
Mycopathologia, 1976Adiaspiromycosis was identified in 6 animals in the examination of the lungs of 90 large carnivores. Emmonsia crescens (Chrysosporium parvum var. crescens) was demonstrated as the causative agent in 5 cases of disease-in the badger (Meles meles), the otter (Lutra lutra) and the fox (Vulpes vulpes). E.
K, Krivanec, M, Otcenásek, J, Slais
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Plucne bolesti : casopis Udruzenja pneumoftiziologa Jugoslavije = the journal of Yugoslav Association of Phthisiology and Pneumology, 1992
A 54-yr old male patient with a history of dyspnea and cough is presented. Due to the clinical course of disease and the radiological changes in the chest a diagnosis of sarcoidosis was established. However, the open lung biopsy revealed the true nature of the pulmonary disease: pulmonary adiaspiromycosis, only secondary to asbestosis, siderosis and ...
Z, Eri +4 more
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A 54-yr old male patient with a history of dyspnea and cough is presented. Due to the clinical course of disease and the radiological changes in the chest a diagnosis of sarcoidosis was established. However, the open lung biopsy revealed the true nature of the pulmonary disease: pulmonary adiaspiromycosis, only secondary to asbestosis, siderosis and ...
Z, Eri +4 more
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Pathology annual, 1979
We have then a disease that, for many years (since 1942), was known only to infect lower animals; after a sporadic encapsulated adiaspore was observed by Doby-Dubois in 1964 in a patient's lung, a widely disseminated, clinically symptomatic case was reported from Czechoslovakia, rapidly followed by three mildly disseminated cases, one from Russia and ...
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We have then a disease that, for many years (since 1942), was known only to infect lower animals; after a sporadic encapsulated adiaspore was observed by Doby-Dubois in 1964 in a patient's lung, a widely disseminated, clinically symptomatic case was reported from Czechoslovakia, rapidly followed by three mildly disseminated cases, one from Russia and ...
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Scanning electron microscopy of experimental adiaspiromycosis
Mycopathologia, 1976Adiaspiromycotic granulomas of mice experimentally inoculated with fungus Emmonsia crescens Emmons et Jellison 1960 were examined by scanning electron microscopy. There morphology, surface structure, and germinating adiaspores isolated from granulomas are described.
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