Laboratory Handbook of Medical Mycology

Laboratory Handbook of Medical Mycology
Author: Michael R. McGinnis
Publisher: Elsevier
Total Pages: 678
Release: 2012-12-02
Genre: Medical
ISBN: 0323138861

Laboratory Handbook of Medical Mycology summarizes the concepts dealing with the laboratory aspects of medical mycology. The publication first offers information on basic terminology and classification, laboratory safety, and clinical specimens. Discussions focus on tissue, abscess, blood, bone marrow, and urine specimens, biological hazards, disinfection and sterilization, grounding of electrical equipment, waste disposal, asexual and sexual reproduction, and vegetative growth. The text then takes a look at mold and yeast identification, including fermentation, temperature studies, asci and ascospores, zygomycetes, cycloheximide resistance, and sporulation and sterile isolates. The manuscript ponders on susceptibility testing and bioassay procedures, culture collection, and quality control. Topics include proficiency evaluations, media and equipment control, depositing unusual isolates in major culture collections, reconstituting lyophilized cultures, bioassay to determine drug levels in body fluids, and in vitro susceptibility testing. The publication is a dependable source of data for laboratory technologists, microbiologists, and mycologists engaged in safely isolating and accurately identifying fungi of medical importance.

Manual of Medical Mycology

Manual of Medical Mycology
Author: John Thorne Crissey
Publisher: Wiley-Blackwell
Total Pages: 263
Release: 1995
Genre: Medical
ISBN: 9780865423633

This practical manual covers the clinical, immunologic, and therapeutic aspects of the important mycoses, along with technical details on the structure and growth habits of the fungi that cause them and the methods available to identify them. Both deep and superficial fungal diseases are covered, so that both the dermatologist and internist will find this book of interest. The information on diagnosis and treatment makes it a useful resource for the physician in practice while the microbiological aspects will appeal to the laboratory technician.