4.7 (707) · $ 14.00 · In stock
We report here two cases of tinea capitis caused by Microsporum (M.) audouinii in Côte d’Ivoire, West Africa. The patients were a three-year-old boy and a six-year-old girl who presented with scaly patches on the scalp. The causative fungus was isolated using an adhesive tape-sampling method and cultured on Sabouraud dextrose agar plates. It was identified as M. audouinii both by its macroscopic and microscopic features, confirmed by DNA sequencing. These are the first documented cases of M. audouinii infections confirmed with DNA sequencing to be reported from Côte d’Ivoire. The practicality of the tape-sampling method makes it possible to carry out epidemiological surveys evaluating the distribution of these dermatophytic infections in remote, resource-limited settings.
Prevention Efforts for Malaria Current Tropical Medicine Reports
Get Your Free Ebook + Bonuses For All My Series — Clare Sager – Romantic Fantasy Author
Frontiers Traditional Knowledge to Contemporary Medication in the Treatment of Infectious Disease Dengue: A Review
The ecology and epidemiology of malaria parasitism in wild chimpanzee reservoirs
TropicalMed, Free Full-Text
TropicalMed, Free Full-Text
The diagnostics and treatment of tropical diseases by E. R. Stitt
Structure and antigenicity of divergent Henipavirus fusion glycoproteins
Full Article: Cheminformatics-based Discovery Of New, 49% OFF
TropicalMed, Free Full-Text
Tafenoquine versus Primaquine to Prevent Relapse of Plasmodium vivax Malaria
Animal and translational models of SARS-CoV-2 infection and COVID-19 - Mucosal Immunology
Virtual screening, ADME/Tox predictions and the drug repurposing concept for future use of old drugs against the COVID-19 - ScienceDirect
TropicalMed, Free Full-Text