Systemic Mycoses

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FUNGI



Adiaspiromycosis

  • Haplomycosis
  • Emmonsia crescens
    • Does not proliferate within the animal body
    • Each spore develops into a thick-walled spherule called a 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

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

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