A prospective survey of air and surface fungal contamination in a medical mycology laboratory at a tertiary care university hospital

Volume: 37, Issue: 3, Pages: 189 - 194
Published: Apr 1, 2009
Abstract
Invasive filamentous fungi infections resulting from inhalation of mold conidia pose a major threat in immunocompromised patients. The diagnosis is based on direct smears, cultural symptoms, and culturing fungi. Airborne conidia present in the laboratory environment may cause contamination of cultures, resulting in false-positive diagnosis. Baseline values of fungal contamination in a clinical mycology laboratory have not been determined to...
Paper Details
Title
A prospective survey of air and surface fungal contamination in a medical mycology laboratory at a tertiary care university hospital
Published Date
Apr 1, 2009
Volume
37
Issue
3
Pages
189 - 194
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