“…Although a definite diagnosis can be obtained with culture [14,15,18,19,[22][23][24]30,33,35,41,45,47,[49][50][51]54,59,62], it was frequently missed in previous reports because of the lack of suspicion that made tissue specimens unavailable for culture purpose. Therefore, the diagnosis of gastrointestinal infection by B. ranarum was mainly obtained on histologic examination, which typical morphologic features include granulomatous inflammation and a diffuse eosinophilic infiltrate with thin walled branched hyphae surrounded by eosinophilic material (Splendore-Höeppli phenomenon) and sometimes zygospores (spherical bodies with foamy cytoplasm) [4,6,12,16,17,20,24,[26][27][28][29][31][32][33][35][36][37][38][39][42][43][44]46,49,52,53,…”