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Blastomycosis, also known as Gilchrist's disease, is a fungal infection, typically of the lungs, which can spread to brain, stomach, intestine and skin, where it appears as crusting purplish warty plaques with a roundish bumpy edge and central depression.
They are the causative agents of blastomycosis, a systemic mycosis in immunocompromised patients. [1] [2] Blastomyces Gilchrist & W.R. Stokes (1898) was an illegitimate homonym of Blastomyces Costantin & Rolland (1888) (a synonym of Chrysosporium), but has now been conserved against the earlier name because of its widespread use in clinical ...
Blastomycosis, a fungal infection that usually occurs in the upper Midwest and Southeast, is being detected in Vermont at higher rates than expected, a new study finds. A rare fungal infection is ...
Blastomyces dermatitidis is the causal agent of blastomycosis, a potentially very serious disease that typically begins with a characteristically subtle pneumonia-like infection that may progress, after 1–6 months, to a disseminated phase that causes lesions to form in capillary beds throughout the body, most notably the skin, internal organs, central nervous system and bone marrow.
Many exposed to the fungal spores that cause blastomycosis won't even get sick. Some will have mild symptoms that go away. And then there are others.
Systemic fungal infections include histoplasmosis, cryptococcosis, coccidioidomycosis, blastomycosis, mucormycosis, aspergillosis, pneumocystis pneumonia and systemic candidiasis. [3] Systemic mycoses due to primary pathogens originate normally in the lungs and may spread to other organ systems.
to thicken (as the nucleus does in early stages of cell death) Greek πύκνωσις (púknōsis), thickening pyknosis: pylor-gate Greek πυλωρός (pulōrós), gate keeper; lower orifice of the stomach pyloric sphincter: pyr-fever: Greek πῦρ, πυρετός (pûr, puretós), fire, heat, fever antipyretic
Dr. William Ophüls, a professor at Stanford University Hospital (San Francisco), discovered [58] that the causative agent of the disease that was at first called Coccidioides infection and later coccidioidomycosis [59] was a fungal pathogen, and coccidioidomycosis was also distinguished from Histoplasmosis and Blastomycosis.