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This resolution may be inadequate for print publishing however there is a web site entitled 'All About Digital Photos' which claims otherwise.
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Nikon photographs are at 300 dpi while the DMD-108 defaults to 72 dpi which was ideal for web publishing. However, I do ask that you do not claim them as your own work, and give this site or myself credit when they are used publicly. I freely share all my photographs on this blog site to all those who may find them interesting and useful. Please do not ask to be added to my non-existent Linkedin profile. New: I have not subscribed to the Linkedin service and if my profile appears there I am unaware of its origin. I am not here to help you with your illness or your thesis! Finally, please realize, I am not a physician therefore I cannot offer medical advice.
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I absolutely will not offer to diagnose your ailment, be it that dry patch on your backside, that thingy you pulled out of your ear or that green stuff growing on the sides of your refrigerator! Please do not send me your photos for identification. Please note that I probably will not respond to most comments as I barely have the time and energy to add new content to this blog. I welcome any comments related to my posts, be it positive or constructive criticism. I've reluctantly added it but may regret it. E-coli & Ascorbic Acid Electron Micrographs.Hope you enjoy the photos shared here at "Fun With Microbiology - What's Buggin' You?" As my prof once said "Microorganisms don't read textbooks so they don't know how they should behave." Microorganism are quite clever too - they have managed to evade our best efforts in being controlled for long or to be eradicated. Microorganisms are fascinating creatures which exhibit diversity and cannot be summed up in a few short paragraphs or depicted with a single black & white photo tucked into the bottom corner of a page. I was always disappointed in the single photo depicting an organism as found in most textbooks. I hope this blog site has evolved into a collection of photo-essays on organisms covered in a bit more detail than found at other sites or in most textbooks. While I would wish to have a somewhat equal balance of bacterial, mycobacterial & parasite posts, the majority of photogenic organisms that come my way are fungal. As I had no original writing to contribute, I chose to share some photos which I had taken. I apologize for the disproportional amount of fungal posts as this site should be about 'Microbiology'. Somehow it all got away from me and I find myself enslaved to the site, trying to find more and more interesting "photogenic" organisms to document.Īnother apology appears elsewhere in this blog, however it is worth reiterating here. Put on the spot, I typed in "Fun With Microbiology - What's Buggin' You?" I now wish I could have thought of something clever and a bit more dignified. This entire endeavor started somewhat as a joke, my never intending to do much more. My wife suggested I try 'Blogging' to pass the time while recuperating from a major illness. My apology for the lame title of this Blog.
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The above photomicrograph is of the Strongyloides larvae in a wet preparation of concentrated fecal material. Thiabendazole was used previously, but owing to its high prevalence of side effects and lower efficay, it has been superceeded by ivermectin and as second line, albendazole. Ivermectin is the drug of first choice for treatment. stercoralis has a very low prevalence in societies where faecal contamination of soil is rare. They are then coughed up and swallowed into the gut, where they parasitize the intestinal mucosa. Some of them enter the superficial veins and ride the blood vessels to the lungs, where they enter the alveoli.
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The infectious larvae penetrate the skin when there is contact with the soil. The genus Strongyloides contains 53 species and S. The adult parasitic stage lives in tunnels in the mucosa of the small intestine. Strongyloides stercoralis is a human parasitic roundworm (Nematode) about 2.5 mm in length.