Microsporum canis is a dermatophyte fungus of which cats and dogs are recognized as the natural hosts. M. canis is also easily transmitted to humans, causing lesions to the glabrous skin (tinea corporis) and to the head (tinea capitis). The present study describes some cases of infection with M. canis in children from a veterinary perspective, highlighting some important features of this clinical entity (e.g., the necessity to identify the animal source of infection with appropriate diagnostic tests; the fact that infected cats may present with no or atypical dermatological signs; and the importance of the environment as a fungal reserve)
Background: Microsporum canis is the most common cause of feline dermatophytosis and the most pathog...
Microsporum canis is one of the dermatophytosis causal agent in dogs. This is a zoophilic dermatophy...
Skin mycoses in animals are mostly caused by Microsporum canis, Microsporum persicolor, Microsporum ...
Microsporum canis is a dermatophyte fungus of which cats and dogs are recognized as the natural host...
Microsporum canis has been frequently isolated from human cases of tinea capitis and tinea corporis....
International audienceMicrosporum canis has been frequently isolated from human cases of tinea capit...
Dermatomycoses are the most common form of mycoses, which include superficial infections of the skin...
This study was made on 79 dogs and 24 cats with dermatomycosis were came to the clinic of Internal m...
Dermatophytoses are frequent in children, but involvement of the facial skin has peculiar aspects th...
In order to determine the prevalence and to characterize the carriage of Microsporum canis in cats, ...
A 3-month-old male red fox that was in contact with a Persian cat referred to the small animal hospi...
Microsporum canis is the dermatophyte most frequently recovered from canine and feline ringworm case...
Dermatophytosis has a practical and medical importance both in the veterinary and human medicine due...
Between January, 1, 1986 and December, 31, 2000, dermatological specimens from 10.678 animals (7.650...
A total of 424 animals (268 dogs and 156 cats) with skin lesions (alopecia and peripheral scaling) w...
Background: Microsporum canis is the most common cause of feline dermatophytosis and the most pathog...
Microsporum canis is one of the dermatophytosis causal agent in dogs. This is a zoophilic dermatophy...
Skin mycoses in animals are mostly caused by Microsporum canis, Microsporum persicolor, Microsporum ...
Microsporum canis is a dermatophyte fungus of which cats and dogs are recognized as the natural host...
Microsporum canis has been frequently isolated from human cases of tinea capitis and tinea corporis....
International audienceMicrosporum canis has been frequently isolated from human cases of tinea capit...
Dermatomycoses are the most common form of mycoses, which include superficial infections of the skin...
This study was made on 79 dogs and 24 cats with dermatomycosis were came to the clinic of Internal m...
Dermatophytoses are frequent in children, but involvement of the facial skin has peculiar aspects th...
In order to determine the prevalence and to characterize the carriage of Microsporum canis in cats, ...
A 3-month-old male red fox that was in contact with a Persian cat referred to the small animal hospi...
Microsporum canis is the dermatophyte most frequently recovered from canine and feline ringworm case...
Dermatophytosis has a practical and medical importance both in the veterinary and human medicine due...
Between January, 1, 1986 and December, 31, 2000, dermatological specimens from 10.678 animals (7.650...
A total of 424 animals (268 dogs and 156 cats) with skin lesions (alopecia and peripheral scaling) w...
Background: Microsporum canis is the most common cause of feline dermatophytosis and the most pathog...
Microsporum canis is one of the dermatophytosis causal agent in dogs. This is a zoophilic dermatophy...
Skin mycoses in animals are mostly caused by Microsporum canis, Microsporum persicolor, Microsporum ...