Results 171 to 180 of about 5,050 (209)
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Pathogenicity of Phialophora pedrosoi
Mycoses, 2009Zusammenfassung 30 Kaninchen wurden mit Phialophora pedrosoi intravenos (durch eine randstandige Ohrvene) infiziert. 15 der Tiere erhielten 2 Tage vor der Inokulation s. c. 100 mg Cortisonacetat und 4 weitere Injektionen alle 2 Tage. Die anderen Tiere erhielten kein Cortisonacetat. Inokuliert wurden 3 Stamme, pro Stamm 5 Kaninchen.
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Phialophora dermatitidis; Its morphology and biology
Medical Mycology, 1970Isolates of Phialophora dermatitidis obtained from human infections of the skin and underlying organs were divided into 2 morphologic types on the basis of their colony appearance and microscopic properties. The virulence of these fungi was established for normal and predisposed mice, and their ability to invade different organs determined by isolation
V, Jotisankasa +2 more
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Lipases of Fonsecaea pedrosoi and Phialophora verrucosa
Antonie van Leeuwenhoek, 1989Lipase activity was demonstrable titrimetrically in the culture filtrates of Fonsecaea pedrosoi and Phialophora verrucosa on the 6th day of incubation reaching a peak on the 15th and 12th days respectively for the two fungi. Purified lipases of F. pedrosoi and P.
C N, Okeke, H C, Gugnani
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Phialophora verrucosa: A new cause of mycetoma
Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology, 1995A 29-year-old Thai woman had draining sinus tracts, tumefaction, and granules on the plantar aspect of the foot. Phialophora verrucosa was isolated from the lesion. P. verrucosa is a major agent of chromoblastomycosis, which is known to rarely cause subcutaneous phaeohyphomycosis.
G W, Turiansky +6 more
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Phaeohyphomycosis caused by Phialophora americana in a dog
Veterinary Dermatology, 2022Abstract Phaeohyphomycosis was diagnosed in a 6‐year‐old, male castrated Dachshund on immunosuppressive treatment. The fungus was identified by culture and PCR as Phialophora americana. This is the first reported case of infection with this pathogen in a dog. The infection was successfully managed medically, without surgical intervention.
Martini, Franco +7 more
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Acute monoarticular arthritis due to phialophora parasitica
The American Journal of Medicine, 1983Abstract The first case of septic arthritis due to Phialophora parasitica is reported, and the literature on human disease due to Phialophora species causing phaeohyphomycosis is reviewed.
A T, Kaell, I, Weitzman
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Control of dimorphism inPhialophora verrucosa
Medical Mycology, 1974The black mold P. verrucosa grew in a defined liquid medium in continuously agitated culture at 27°C with the formation of mycelia and production of phialospores. When Mn++ was omitted from the defined medium, phialospores were not formed, and the dispened growth, consisted of short hyphae with terminal chlamydospores resembling the tissue phase ...
E, Reiss, W J, Nickerson
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Mycotic Granuloma Caused byPhialophora repens
American Journal of Clinical Pathology, 1975This is the first reported infection by the saprophytic fungus, Phialophora repens. The infection was a solitary granulomatous nodule in the scalp of a Zaïrian man with advanced lepromatous leprosy. The patient was being treated by long-term prednisolone therapy.
W M, Meyers +2 more
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Mitochondrial DNA analysis of Phialophora verrucosa
Mycoses, 1997Summary. Restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) was examined in 32 isolates of Phialophora verrucosa (eight isolates from Japan, 10 from China, four from the USA, six from Venezuela and four from Colombia) and in three of Phialophora americana using five restriction enzymes. P. verrucosa isolates were divided into
Y, Yamagishi, K, Kawasaki, H, Ishizaki
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The Journal of Hand Surgery, 1981
A case of an unusual cause of chromomycosis of the hand is described. Follow-up at 2 months revealed a complete recovery following removal of the mass, without treatment with antifungal therapy. A review of the different disease entities of the chromomycoses and a brief generic classification of the dematiacious fungi are presented.
P W, Monroe, W E, Floyd
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A case of an unusual cause of chromomycosis of the hand is described. Follow-up at 2 months revealed a complete recovery following removal of the mass, without treatment with antifungal therapy. A review of the different disease entities of the chromomycoses and a brief generic classification of the dematiacious fungi are presented.
P W, Monroe, W E, Floyd
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