178 



MEDICAL MYCOLOGY 



fructose, and galactose. No indol formation. Milk not coagulated. Coagu- 

 lated human serum slowly liquefied. No effect on gelatin in 30 days. 



While no asci or ascospores have been reported in the following species, 

 its pathogenicity, its cultural characters, and morphology all place it in 

 Zymonema rather than Mycoderma, very close to Z. dermatitidis. 



Zymonema Harteri (Verdun) Dodge, n. comb. 



Cryptococcus Harteri Verdun, Precis ParasitoL, 1912. 



Atelosaccharomyces Harteri Beurmann & Gougerot, 1913. 



Parasaccharomyces Harteri Froilano de Mello, Paes & Sousa, Arq. Hig. Pat. 

 Exot. 6: 33, 1918. 



Mycelohlastanon Harteri Ota, Jap. Jour. Derm. Urol. 28: [4] 1928. 



Fig-. 35. — Zymonema Harteri. (After Pollacci & Nannizzi 1926.) 



Monilia Harteri Vuillemin, Champ. Paras. Homme. Anim. 85, 1931. 



Mycotorula albicans Langeron & Talice, Ann. ParasitoL Hum. Comp. 10: 

 47, 1932, jyro parte. 



Torulopsis Harteri Almeida, Annaes Fac. Med. Sao Paulo 9: 10, 1933. 



Isolated from a case of generalized blastomycosis presumably contracted 

 in Cochin China. The organism has evidently invaded the intestinal tract, 

 liver, lungs and finally produced subcutaneous nodules. [Case of Harter, 

 C. K. Soc. Biol. 64: 241-242, 1908; De la blastomycose humaine. These Fac. 

 Med. Univ. Nancy 20: 1-222, 1909.] Pathogenic for rabbits and mice. Medi- 

 cation with KI ineft'ective. 



Sprout cells ovoid or ellipsoid, 4-6 x 3-5/x, somewhat larger in liquid media, 

 with some spherical cells in old cultures. On solid media elongate cells 



