Laboratory Medical Mycology |
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Page 4
... identification of fungi , in most instances are difficult to obtain , especially from pathogenic fungi . The asexual spores of these fungi are usually the only type available for identification . Asexual spores are found easily in the ...
... identification of fungi , in most instances are difficult to obtain , especially from pathogenic fungi . The asexual spores of these fungi are usually the only type available for identification . Asexual spores are found easily in the ...
Page 35
... identification procedures of fungi ; serum for the germ - tube test for Candida albicans ; stains for screening or identifying fungi . It is important that an average reactive positive control be used rather than a high positive control ...
... identification procedures of fungi ; serum for the germ - tube test for Candida albicans ; stains for screening or identifying fungi . It is important that an average reactive positive control be used rather than a high positive control ...
Page 115
... identifying most of the common isolates . However , final identification should be made only after studying the isolate in a lac- tophenol cotton blue wet mount preparation . When the wet mount does not allow definite identification due ...
... identifying most of the common isolates . However , final identification should be made only after studying the isolate in a lac- tophenol cotton blue wet mount preparation . When the wet mount does not allow definite identification due ...
Contents
INTRODUCTION | 1 |
Specimen Collection | 41 |
Specimen Examination | 68 |
Copyright | |
19 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
100x objective Actinomyces actinomycetes aerial hyphae agar plate agar plate grown albicans anaerobic arthrospores ascospores Aspergillus assimilation Autoclave biopsy blastospores blood branching broth Candida capsulatum causative agents characteristic chlamydospores chromomycosis Cladosporium clinical collected Colony morphology colony on SAB color conidia conidiophores coverslip Cryptococcus culture dark dermatitidis dermatophytes dextrose diameter Distilled water filter fluid fungal Fungal Agents fungi fungus granules grown at 30°C hair Histoplasma hyphae hyphae appear hyaline IDENTIFICATION incubate at 30°C infection Inoculate isolation KOH wet mount lesions macroconidia medium Microscopic appearance Microsporum mycelia mycelial mycetoma mycology mycology laboratory Mycosel mycoses mycotic disease needle Nocardia opportunistic patients Petri dish pigment procedure produce pseudohyphae reverse side SAB agar plate saprobic septate side of colonies skin scrapings slant slide smears species specimen spores sputum stain sterile Streptomyces sugar surface swabs tinea tissues Trichophyton usually wet mount Wet mount showing yeast yeast cells