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when using the microscope for an intravaginal infection you see something translucent and colorless, what do you suspect?



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When using the microscope for an intravaginal infection, you might sometimes spot a translucent and colorless substance, called hyphae.

Garden hose-like hyphae are protracted tubular formations. They feature solid cell walls that might perhaps be strengthened by septa, which are perforated cross-walls (singular: septum). In fungi, hyphae help in a number of processes. They include the nuclei that contain the genetic material as well as the cytoplasm, or cell sap.

Hyphae carry nutrients from the environment to different areas of the thallus (fungus body). In the end, they could unite or undergo modifications to create more intricate structures. Only a very tiny percentage of yeasts do not generate hyphae, but the bulk of fungi do.

As in the case of the right-hand fungus, which appears to be bleaching and dissolving its way across the surface, some fungi spend their whole lives as isolated hyphae feasting on a local source of sustenance.

Learn more about intravaginal infection and hyphae here:

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