Two cases of adiaspiromycosis in small mammals.
نویسندگان
چکیده
منابع مشابه
NOTE Pathology First detection of adiaspiromycosis in the lungs of a deer
Adiaspiromycosis is a pulmonary infection caused by the soil fungi, Emmonsia crescens and E. parva. It primarily affects small mammals and can range from an asymptomatic condition to fatal disseminated disease. We detected a granuloma containing fungal spherules, which were morphologically consistent with the adiaspores of E. crescens in the lungs of a female Hokkaido sika deer. This is the fir...
متن کاملFirst detection of adiaspiromycosis in the lungs of a deer
Adiaspiromycosis is a pulmonary infection caused by the soil fungi, Emmonsia crescens and E. parva. It primarily affects small mammals and can range from an asymptomatic condition to fatal disseminated disease. We detected a granuloma containing fungal spherules, which were morphologically consistent with the adiaspores of E. crescens in the lungs of a female Hokkaido sika deer. This is the fir...
متن کاملAdiaspiromycosis of an Apodemus agrarius captured wild rodent in Korea
Adiaspiromycosis is caused by pulmonary infection with Emmonsia. Inhalated spores of Emmonsia cause asymptomatic infection to necrogranulomatous pneumonia, depending on the burden of adiaspore and host immunity. For disease monitoring of wild rodents captured on Jeju Island in Korea, we examined the lung tissue of wild rodents histopathologically. Spores composed of thick three-layered walls we...
متن کاملAcute pulmonary adiaspiromycosis. Report of three cases and a review of 16 other cases collected from the literature.
We describe three cases of adiaspiromycosis with acute clinical manifestations and diffuse lung lesions. Sixteen previously reported similar cases are also reviewed. The best designation for this syndrome is acute pulmonary adiaspiromycosis.
متن کاملAjellomyces crescens sp. nov., taxonomy of Emmonsia spp., and relatedness with Blastomyces dermatitidis (teleomorph Ajellomyces dermatitidis).
Adiaspiromycosis is known primarily as a pulmonary infection of small burrowing mammals and rarely of humans, in which the tissue spore form consists of a large, globose, thick-walled, non-proliferating structure called an adiaspore. The causative agents have been placed in Emmonsia or Chrysosporium and treated as either two species or varieties. Emmonsia parva (= Chrysosporium parvum var. parv...
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عنوان ژورنال:
- The Japanese journal of veterinary research
دوره 19 4 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 1971