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SPOROTRICHOSIS

Dermatologic Clinics, 1996
Sporothrix schenckii is a fungus that can be found worldwide in decaying vegetative matter. It is the causative agent of sporotrichosis, a chronic infection of humans and animals. The infection is characterized by nodular lesions of the cutaneous and subcutaneous tissues with lymphatic involvement.
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Sporotrichosis in Children

Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1971
Although sporotrichosis is reputed to occur only rarely in children, we have seen 11 such children in the last ten years. Questionnaires were sent to the parents of these children and the data from the questionnaires were compared to the data available for 36 previously reported cases in children.
Peter J. Lynch   +2 more
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Sporotrichosis in Childhood

Pediatrics, 1968
Sporotrichosis, a world-wide disease caused by Sporotrichium schenckii, occurs as a subacute or chronic infection, usually of the skin and subcutaneous tissues, but may on rare occasions undergo extracutaneous dissemination. Sex and race may be less important than age in its genesis. Children are rarely attacked.
Carlton L. Carpenter, Henry W. Jolly
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Sporotrichosis in Nepal

International Journal of Dermatology, 1990
Abstract:The first case of sporotrichosis from Nepal is reported in a 25–year‐old man from a village about 60 km east of Kathmandu. He never travelled outside of Nepal before and had acquired the lymphocutaneous form of the disease after an accidental injury to the right foot while cutting wood.
S. Kandhari   +3 more
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Sporotrichosis in Sudan

Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1978
Two cases of lymphocutaneous sporotrichosis are reported from Sudan in a boy aged four and a half years and a girl aged 16 years respectively. Diagnosis was based mainly on the clinical findings and the dramatic response to treatment with oral potassium iodine, as well as the histological finding of yeasts compatible with the yeast phase Sporothrix ...
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Treatment of Sporotrichosis

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1970
To the Editor.— Dr. Hornick's comments are well taken. He is perfectly correct in reminding the readers that there is no good evidence that griseofulvin is effective in the treatment of sporotrichosis. Our intention was not to suggest the drug as a mode of therapy for sporotrichosis, but rather to include it in a list of agents that have been used by ...
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Troubles in Sporotrichosis

New England Journal of Medicine, 1969
SINCE the days of the early Christian church Dorothy has been the patron saint of gardeners. Although she is probably seldom invoked today, the gardener in whom the occupational disease, sporotrichosis, develops and those who attend him may have wished for deliverance. A painless but persistent ulcer on the finger, with subsequent red or draining areas
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Sporotrichosis in a Dog

Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association, 1971
SUMMARY Culture of infected hair and associated exudate was essential for the detection of sporotrichosis in a dog. The diagnosis was confirmed by means of animal inoculation, histologic examination, and fluorescent antibody microscopy. Oral administration of KI for 18 days was associated with diarrhea, anorexia, and weight loss, but the skin lesions ...
G, Koehne, H S, Powell, R I, Hail
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A Spotlight on Sporothrix and Sporotrichosis

Mycopathologia, 2022
A. M. Rodrigues   +2 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Sporotrichosis

New England Journal of Medicine, 2019
Jinglin Qin, Junmin Zhang
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