Date: 21 January 2014
Further details
Image B. Additional cavities are apparent inferior to this large cavity and are in communication both with the bronchi and the additional cavities. Some of the apparent cavities are probably dilated bronchi. The left lower lung is completely opacified otherwise. The degree of pleural fibrosis surrounding the left apical cavity is reduced slightly over the interval of four months.
Image C. This shows an almost normal hyperexpanded right lung with a very substantially contracted left lung with one large airway visible and probably incontinuity with a slightly irregular cavity containing some debris, presumably fungal tissue. Other levels show very large left apical cavity with numerous subsections containing debris or fibrotic tissue and almost complete fibrosis of the lung below the level of the carina on the left, with some calcification within the fibrotic lung tissue.
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Notes: n/a
Images library
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Title
Legend
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Canker: Grapevine. Canker caused by A. niger on trunk of Red Globe grapes
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Blight: Fig leaf. Shoot and leaf blight caused by infection of fig fruit by A. niger
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Fresh fruit: Plum. Infection of Friar plum with A. niger, showing many white sclerotia
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Infection of a fresh Elegant Lady peach by A.niger
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Fresh fruit: Nectarine. A. niger infected Fantasia nectarines showing abundance of white sclerotia
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Fresh fruit: Fig. Sclerotia of A. niger on Calimyrna figs 6 days after inoculation
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Fresh fruit: Fig. Infection of fresh fig by A. niger (early infection)
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Fresh fruit: Fig. A. parasiticus infection on Calimyrna fig
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Fresh fruit: Fig. A. ochraceus in profichi (male) caprifig