Skip to main content
. 2000 Oct;13(4):662–685. doi: 10.1128/cmr.13.4.662-685.2000

FIG. 2.

FIG. 2

(Left) View of the fundus of a patient with C. parapsilosis fungemia complicating total parenteral nutrition for esophageal cancer. A chorioretinal lesion is shown (arrow), and there is accompanying vitreous haze. (Middle left) C. albicans in retinal tissue with both blastoconidia and pseudohyphae present. (Photo courtesy of F. G. LaPiana.) (Middle right) Fundoscopic montage of the eye of a patient with P. carinii. There are edema of the optic nerve head (the circular whitish area in the center from which the blood vessels originate) and scattered multifocal choroidal mass lesions (whitish to yellowish circular lesions). (Reprinted from reference 138 with permission from the publisher.) (Right) C. albicans keratitis in an immunocompromised patient. The dense yellow-white stromal infiltrate resembles bacterial keratitis. It partially covers the pupil. There is a small hypopyon present. (Reprinted from reference 137a with permission from the publisher.)