Difference between revisions of "Systemic Mycoses"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
m |
|||
Line 15: | Line 15: | ||
*''Emmonsia crescens'' | *''Emmonsia crescens'' | ||
**Does not proliferate within the animal body | **Does not proliferate within the animal body | ||
− | **Each spore develops into a thick-walled spherule called | + | **Each spore develops into a thick-walled spherule called an '''adiaspore''' |
*Non-contageous, pulmonary mycosis | *Non-contageous, pulmonary mycosis |
Revision as of 13:07, 4 May 2009
This article is still under construction. |
|
Adiaspiromycosis
- Haplomycosis
- Emmonsia crescens
- Does not proliferate within the animal body
- Each spore develops into a thick-walled spherule called an adiaspore
- Non-contageous, pulmonary mycosis
- Worldwide
- Affects burrowing rodents and small animals
- Respiratory infection
- Spetate hyphae with large numbers of small, round conidia either singly or in groups on the ends of the short conidiospores can be seen
Aspergillosis
- Aspergillus fumigatus causes rhinitis and in respiratory tract inflammation, also sinusitis, guttural pouch mycosis
- Sometimes appears on lesions of ethmoidal haematoma
- May cause COPD
Blastomycosis
- North America
Coccidioidomycosis
- Coccidioides immitis
- Ocurs in the soil
- Respiratory infections
- Most commonly seen following dust storms
- Occurs in arid regions
- E.g. South West USA and Mexico
- Non-contageous, systemic mycosis
- Affects dogs, cattle, sheep and humans
- Mainly affects the lungs
- Dissemination can occur to other organs
- Thick-walled spherule in tissue
- Saprophytic phase consists of coarse, septate, branching hyphae which fragment into thick-walled, barrel-shaped arthrospores which alternate with empty cells
Entomophthoromycisus
- Basidiobolmycosis
Histoplasmosis
- Histoplasma capsulatum
- Non-contageous, systemic mycosis
- Commonly pulmonary infections occur
- Other organs can be involved
- Endemic to the USA
- Isolated cases have been reported in Europe
- Respiratory infection
- Affects dogd, cats, cattle, horses and humans
- Present intracellularly in macrophages as oval yeast cells with few buds
- Found in soil contaminated by bird droppings and in caes inhabited by bats
- Fine, branching, septate hyphae with smooth-walled pyriform to spherical microconidia and large, thick-walled tuberculate macroconidia on simple conidiophores
Zygomycosis
- Mucormycosis