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This image shows a culture of Microsporum canis fungi growing on boiled polished rice grains.Created: 1962
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Conidial head of an Aspergillus niger fungal organism showing a double row of sterigmata.Created: 1955
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This photomicrograph shows the conidial head of an Aspergillus niger fungus.Created: 1955
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This micrograph depicts the irregularly shaped macroconidia from the fungal organism Microsporum distortum.Created: 1970
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Under a magnification of 500X, this Gomori-stained photomicrograph of a primate tissue sample, revealed some of the histopathologic cytoarchitectural changes associated with what was determined to be a case of lobomycosis due to the fungus, Lacazia loboi.Created: 1973
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Under a magnification of 500X, this PAS-stained (periodic-acid-Schiff) photomicrograph of a primate tissue sample, revealed some of the histopathologic cytoarchitectural changes associated with what was determined to be a case of lobomycosis due to the fungus, Lacazia loboi.Created: 1973
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Note the histopathologic changes in a case of primate lobomycosis caused by Lacazia loboi, formerly Loboa loboi.Created: 1973
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Magnified under a low magnification of 40X, this photomicrograph depicts the microconidia of the fungus Trichophyton mariatii.Created: 1979
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This photograph featured a Petri dish, which had been used to culture a colony of dermatophytic fungus, Microsporum ferrugineum.Dermatophytes are types of fungi that cause common skin, hair and nail infections. Infections caused by these fungi are also known by the names tinea and ringworm. It is important to emphasize that ringworm is not caused by a worm, but rather by a type of fungus called a dermatophyte. One example of a very common dermatophyte infection is athletes foot, which is also called tinea pedis. Another common dermatophyte infection affecting the groin area is jock itch, also known as tinea cruris.Created: 1974
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This photomicrograph depicts the mycelia, conidiophores, and conidia of the fungus Microsporum gallinae.Created: 1978
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This photomicrograph revealed some of the histopathologic characteristics found within a pus specimen, which was prepared using periodic acid-Schiff (PAS), and which had been harvested from a skin lesion in a case of cutaneous coccidioidomycosis. In this particular specimen youll note the chlamydospore, or immature spherule of a Coccidioides immitis fungal organism. As the reproductive structure of this, as well as other types of fungi, this spherule is also known as a chlamydoconidium, and contains the organisms endospores.Created: 1975
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This photomicrograph revealed some of the histopathologic characteristics found within a pus specimen, which was prepared using periodic acid-Schiff (PAS), and which had been harvested from a skin lesion in a case of cutaneous coccidioidomycosis. In this particular specimen youll note the chlamydospore, or immature spherule of a Coccidioides immitis fungal organism. As the reproductive structure of this, as well as other types of fungi, this spherule is also known as a chlamydoconidium, and contains the organisms endospores.Created: 1975
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This photomicrograph revealed some of the histopathologic characteristics found within a pus specimen, which was prepared using periodic acid-Schiff (PAS), and which had been harvested from a skin lesion in a case of cutaneous coccidioidomycosis. In this particular specimen youll note the chlamydospore, or mature spherule of a Coccidioides immitis fungal organism. As the reproductive structure of this, as well as other types of fungi, this spherule is also known as a chlamydoconidium, and contains the organisms endospores.Created: 1975
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This photomicrograph revealed some of the histopathologic characteristics found within a pus specimen, which was prepared using periodic acid-Schiff (PAS), and which had been harvested from a skin lesion in a case of cutaneous coccidioidomycosis. In this particular specimen youll note the chlamydospore, or mature spherule of a Coccidioides immitis fungal organism. As the reproductive structure of this, as well as other types of fungi, this spherule is also known as a chlamydoconidium, and contains the organisms endospores.Created: 1975
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This photomicrograph revealed some of the histopathologic characteristics found within a pus specimen, which was prepared using potassium hudroxide (KOH), and which had been harvested from a skin lesion in a case of cutaneous coccidioidomycosis. In this particular specimen youll note the chlamydospore, or spherule of a Coccidioides immitis fungal organism. As the reproductive structure of this, as well as other types of fungi, this spherule is also known as a chlamydoconidium, and contains the organisms endospores.Created: 1975
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This was a Sabourauds dextrose agar culture of Coccidioides immitis with chloramphenicol and cycloheximide after 2 wks.Created: 1979
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Using methenamine silver stain, this photomicrograph reveals spherules of Coccidioides immitis in brain tissue.Created: 1964
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This methenamine silver stained photomicrograph reveals spherules of Coccidioides immitis fungus.Created: 1964
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Using methenamine silver stain, this photomicrograph reveals spherules of the fungus Coccidioides immitis.Created: 1964
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Note the histopathologic changes in a case of coccidioidomycosis of the lung showing a large fibrocaseous nodule.Created: 1964
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This photograph depicts the reverse view of a Petri dish within which a fungal colony of a Mexican isolate ofTrichophyton rubrum var. rodainii had been cultured atop a medium of Sabourauds agar.Created: 1977
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This photograph depicts the frontal view of a Petri dish within which a fungal colony of a Mexican isolate of Trichophyton rubrum var. rodainii had been cultured atop a medium of Sabourauds agar.Created: 1974
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This photomicrograph revealed some of the ultrastructural morphology exhibited by Trichophyton rubrum fungal organisms.T. rubrum and T. tonsurans are two common dermatophytes. These two species are usually transmitted from person to person. Another common dermatophyte is Microsporum canis, which is transmitted from animals such as cats and dogs to people. Dermatophytes like to live on moist areas of the skin, such as places where there are skin folds. They can also contaminate items in the environment, such as clothing, towels and bedding.Created: 1974
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This photograph depicts the frontal view of a Petri dish within which a colony of the African form of the fungus, Trichophyton rubrum, had been cultured. Revealed is the colonial morphology, which in this case is both glaborous, i.e., flat to cottony, and raised and ruffled at its center. Its frontal coloration can range from a white to bright yellowish-beige, as it was here, and even to a red-violet coloration. From the reverse, or from the back, the colonies display a coloration that is a light yellowish to brown, or a reddish brown.Created: 1974