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Marty and Laura discuss the dangers of blastomycosis and other fungal infections for our pets as well as their humans.
"Blasto tends to be the upper Midwest," Marty said. "It's frequently found in areas where wood chipping has taken place, so places that trees have been cut down or chipped or garden centers and you know, things along those lines.
"There are other parts of the country that have other kinds of fungal infections. So it's not like if you don't live in Wisconsin that you're safe from it. So Wisconsin, Minnesota, those areas, we see a lot of it. If you go to the Southwest like Arizona, then you see coccidiomycosis (Valley Fever), which is also fungal.
"And then if you go to the Mississippi Valley. Find histoplasmosis. So there's definitely regional differences. They're all nasty, wicked bad diseases, and people think of fungus and yeast as being the same thing and they're not. It is systemic. It is a bad, bad, bad disease. The commonality between histo and blasto and coccidiomycosis is that it causes fungal pneumonia and then there's other organs that are involved differently in different of those diseases."
Marty walks through symptoms, diagnosis and treatment of fungal infections in our pets, both dogs and cats. She also warns these diseases can affect humans.
"I had a client that had two sons that both had blasto. Human sons. So you can see that kind of a typical pattern is it's from the exposure of the spore," Marty said. "You inhale the spore, it ends up in your lungs, you get pneumonia and that spreads to other organs. So it's not spread dog to dog, it's not spread dog to human. It's spread through the common source of the soil being disrupted with that kind of pH and that kind of environment that the sports can live in."
The Marty & Laura Show is produced by Pure Dog Talk Inc., with sound design and editing by Premium Audio Services.
By Laura Reeves & Dr. Marty Greer5
1313 ratings
Marty and Laura discuss the dangers of blastomycosis and other fungal infections for our pets as well as their humans.
"Blasto tends to be the upper Midwest," Marty said. "It's frequently found in areas where wood chipping has taken place, so places that trees have been cut down or chipped or garden centers and you know, things along those lines.
"There are other parts of the country that have other kinds of fungal infections. So it's not like if you don't live in Wisconsin that you're safe from it. So Wisconsin, Minnesota, those areas, we see a lot of it. If you go to the Southwest like Arizona, then you see coccidiomycosis (Valley Fever), which is also fungal.
"And then if you go to the Mississippi Valley. Find histoplasmosis. So there's definitely regional differences. They're all nasty, wicked bad diseases, and people think of fungus and yeast as being the same thing and they're not. It is systemic. It is a bad, bad, bad disease. The commonality between histo and blasto and coccidiomycosis is that it causes fungal pneumonia and then there's other organs that are involved differently in different of those diseases."
Marty walks through symptoms, diagnosis and treatment of fungal infections in our pets, both dogs and cats. She also warns these diseases can affect humans.
"I had a client that had two sons that both had blasto. Human sons. So you can see that kind of a typical pattern is it's from the exposure of the spore," Marty said. "You inhale the spore, it ends up in your lungs, you get pneumonia and that spreads to other organs. So it's not spread dog to dog, it's not spread dog to human. It's spread through the common source of the soil being disrupted with that kind of pH and that kind of environment that the sports can live in."
The Marty & Laura Show is produced by Pure Dog Talk Inc., with sound design and editing by Premium Audio Services.

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