152 INFECTIONS CAUSED BY MOLDS 



tion in the mediastinal and bronchial lymph nodes in cattle and 

 sheep, and Farness " has observed the disseminated form of the 

 mycosis in dogs. 



LITERATURE 



1. Aronson, J. D., R. M. Saylor, and E. I. Parr, Relationship of coccidioido- 



mycosis to calcified pulmonary nodules, Arch. Path., 34, 31 (1942). 



2. AsHBURN, L. L., and C. W. Emmons, Experimental Haplosporangium infec- 



tion, Arch. Path., 39, 3 (1945). 



3. Baker, E. E., E. M. Mrak, and C. E. Smith, The morphology, taxonomy, 



and distribution of Coccidioides immitis Rixford and Gilchrist, 1896, 

 Farlowki, 1, 199 (1943). 



4. (jox, A. J., and C. E. Smith, Arrested pulmonary coccidioidal granuloma. 

 Arch. Path., 27, 717 (1939). 



5. Dickson, E. C, "Valley fever" of the San Joaquin Valley and fungus Coc- 



cidioides, Calif, and Western Med., 47, 151 (1937). 



6. , Primary coccidioidomycosis, Am. Rev. Tuberc, 38, 722 (1938). 



7. Emmons, C. W., Coccidioidomycosis, Mycologia, 34, 452 (1942). 



8. , Coccidioidomycosis in wild rodents. A method of determining the 



extent of endemic areas. Pub. Health Repts., 58, 1 (1943). 



9. Emmons, C. W., and L. L. Ashburn, The isolation of Haplosporangium 



parvum n. sp. and Coccidioides immitis from wild rodents, Pub. Health 

 Repts., 57, 1715 (1942). 



10. Farness, O. J., Coccidioidomycosis, J. Am. Med. Assoc, 116, 1749 (1941). 



11. Gifford, M. a.. Coccidioidomycosis, Kern County, Aim. Rept. Kern County 



Dept. Pub. Health, 1938-1939, pp. 73-79. 



12. Ophuls, W., and H. C. Moffitt, A new pathogenic mould (formerly de- 



scribed as a protozoon: Coccidioides immitis pyogenes), Phila. Med. J., 

 5, 1471 (1900). 



13. Rixford, E., and T. C. Gilchrist, Two cases of protozoan (Coccidioidal 



infection of the skin and other organs, Johns Hopkins Hosp. Repts., 1, 

 209 (1896). 



14. Smith, C. E., Epidemiology of acute coccidioidomycosis with erythema 



nodosum, Am. J. Pub. Health, 30, 600 (1940). 



15. , Parallelism of coccidioidal and tuberculous infections. Radiology, 38, 



643 (1942). 



16. , Coccidioidomycosis, Med. Clinics N. America, pp. 790-807, 1943. 



17. Stiles, G. W., and C. L. Davis, Coccidioidal granuloma (coccidioidomy- 



cosis), J. Am. Med. Assoc, 119, 765 (1942). 



18. Winn, W. A., Pulmonary cavitation associated with coccidioidal infection. 



Arch. Internal Med., 68, 1179 (1941). 



THE DERMATOPHYTOSES 



(Dermatomycosis, Epidermatophytosis, Ringworm, Tinea, 



"Athlete's Foot") 



The term dermatophytosis is generally used to indicate a series of 

 diseases caused by a group of fungi which practically never invade 



