There was some discussion on the BOI lately about Cryptosporidium parvum and some leos being diagnosed with it. It was only discovered to be an opportunistic pathogen in humans in 1975. It is not a fungus as someone else stated, but an apicomplexan related to Eimeria (coccidiosis). With the increasing number of immunocompromised people (AIDS, organ transplants, etc), it has shown to be a huge problem in these people. Children and the elderly are at the greatest risk. These cases just remind us of the increasing importance in the herp industry of proper handwashing, quarantines, and cage sanitation. Many animals including some people can become disease free carriers! This makes prevention at the utmost importance. I would recommend Nolvasan or concentrated hydrogen peroxide to clean contaminated surfaces. Jeff, I'm sorry to hear about your case, the CDC was probably interested because most people have a favorable immune response against it, and it clears up within a week. I bet you had three weeks of hell. If you feel that you may have a case of it inform your veterinarian as fecal spores are tough to view under normal microscopy. This is not a disease you want your children to contract. (information from Foundations of Parasitology, Schmidt and Roberts)
Thanks
J. Dustin Loy
Thanks
J. Dustin Loy