Albican Information and Courses from MediaLab, Inc.
These are the MediaLab courses that cover Albican and links to relevant pages within the course.
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| Which of the following yeasts causes thrush: | View Page |
| Match the names of each of the yeast species with its most likely colony morphology as seen in the images on the right. | View Page |
| Match the name of each of the species of yeast listed with its corresponding microscopic appearance as illustrated in the images on the right. | View Page |
| Match the names of each of the yeast species listed with its corresponding appearance when grown in cornmeal agar, as seen in the images. | View Page |
| Match the names of each of the species of yeast listed with its associated phenotypic property that is helpful in establishing a species identification. | View Page |
| Match the name of each species of yeast listed below with the location listed in the drop-down box where that species may be concentrated. | View Page |
| Arrange the yeast species listed in the drop-down box in order of increasing virulence, from the least to the most pathogenic. | View Page |
| Match the complications that are most likely to be associated with each of the two yeast diseases that are listed in the drop-down box: | View Page |
| Match each of the fungal species listed below with the appropriate category, indicating whether or not it has the capability of producing pseudohyphae on cornmeal agar. | View Page |
| The growth of the yeast-like colonies shown in the upper image was obtained on blood agar from a skin culture only in the area overlaid by virgin olive oil. The lower image is a photomicrograph of a lactophenol blue mount made from a portion of the colony. The disease associated with this fungus is: | View Page |
| The forms seen in this photomicrograph, produced from a light inoculum of an unknown yeast colony incubated in rabbit plasma at 35°C for 2 hours, leads to the presumptive identification of: | View Page |
| Shown in this photomicrograph is a Gomori methenamine silver stain of a lung biopsy obtained from a patient with X-ray evidence of multi-focal pneumonitis. The yeast most likely to be recovered in culture of this tissue is: | View Page |
| The colony shown in the upper image was recovered from peritoneal fluid of a patient receiving continuous peritoneal dialysis. The lower image is a photomicrograph prepared from a small portion of the colony illustrating the microscopic morphology. Each of the following species of yeast can be eliminated except: | View Page |
| The ability of Candida albicans to alternate between two phenotypes, which may be related to the virulence of this species, is called: | View Page |