Results 11 to 20 of about 1,283 (171)
Cutaneous Emmonsia infection in a renal transplant recipient [PDF]
INTRODUCTION Emmonsia species are dimorphic fungi, which can cause human disease through inhalation of airborne conidia from soil. They convert into yeastlike cells, which replicate and cause extrapulmonary disease via hematological dissemination ...
Alexandra C. Kuzyk, MD +2 more
doaj +8 more sources
Emmonsia helica Infection in HIV-Infected Man, California, USA [PDF]
Emmonsia-like fungi have rarely been reported from North America. We report a fatal case of E. helica infection in a man with advanced HIV infection from California, USA, who had progressive respiratory failure and a brain abscess.
Martin Rofael +4 more
doaj +4 more sources
Fatal Emmonsia sp. Infection and Fungemia after Orthotopic Liver Transplantation
We report a fatal case of disseminated Emmonsia sp. infection in a 55-year-old man who received an orthotopic liver transplant. The patient had pneumonia and fungemia, and multisystem organ failure developed.
Shanthi Kappagoda +5 more
doaj +5 more sources
The Dynamic Genome and Transcriptome of the Human Fungal Pathogen Blastomyces and Close Relative Emmonsia. [PDF]
Three closely related thermally dimorphic pathogens are causal agents of major fungal diseases affecting humans in the Americas: blastomycosis, histoplasmosis and paracoccidioidomycosis.
José F Muñoz +25 more
doaj +10 more sources
50 Years of Emmonsia Disease in Humans: The Dramatic Emergence of a Cluster of Novel Fungal Pathogens. [PDF]
CITATION: Schwartz, I. S. et al. 2015. 50 years of Emmonsia disease in humans : the dramatic emergence of a cluster of novel fungal pathogens. PLoS Pathogens, 11(11): e1005198, doi:10.1371/journal.ppat.1005198.
Ilan S Schwartz +12 more
doaj +10 more sources
Disseminated Emmonsia in an HIV-HBV co-infected man
The differential diagnoses in patients with advanced HIV/AIDS presenting with fever and systemic illness is wide and warrants both infectious and non-infectious considerations.
Arthur Mutyaba +5 more
doaj +5 more sources
Emmonsia crescensinfection in a British water vole (Arvicola terrestris)
Emmonsia crescens, a dimorphic fungus of the order Onygenales, is primarily a pathogen of lower animals and rarely humans. Inhaled conidia of E. crescens fail to germinate in the lungs, and instead simply enlarge in lung tissue to become giant adiaspores.
Andrew M Borman +2 more
exaly +3 more sources
A presumptive case of cutaneous emergomycosis in a female patient with HIV – Maseru, Lesotho [PDF]
Emergomycosis is a recently described emerging opportunistic fungal infection among individuals living with HIV, in whom it is a cause of significant mortality and morbidity.
Waheeba M.H. Madani, Wayne Grayson
doaj +2 more sources
The family Ajellomycetaceae (Onygenales) includes mammal-associated pathogens within the genera Blastomyces, Emmonsia, Histoplasma and Paracoccidioides, as well as the recently described genera, Emergomyces that causes disease in immunocompromised hosts,
Yanping Jiang +13 more
semanticscholar +3 more sources

