Fusarium causes plants to look as if they have experienced drought for months, meaning leaves and pseudobulbs look severely dessicated. Not just slightly in need of more water. I don't see any such signs in your plant. Is the discoloration in the pseudobulb closest to the viewer/camera in the top photo? (Photos are a little fuzzy, just making sure.). Purple coloration can happen due to a number of things, some benign or beneficial (such as improvement in light) or in response to cultural or environmental factors.
I do see some black dots. Those could be a fungal infection (common in Oncidium and relatives). Treat with a general purpose fungicide such as Cleary's (thiophanate-methyl), available online if not in your local garden center. Providing more calcium also can help plants resist diseases.
In recent years there has been a lot of hysteria on YouTube regarding Fusarium. Take that advice with a very large grain of salt, maybe an entire salt shaker. A few prior posters here on the subject of Fusarium have cut up entirely healthy plants looking for the dreaded "purple ring". Cutting should be a last resort. I would first look at:
1. Does the plant seem badly dehydraded? (Yours doesn't). Plants with Fusarium appear almost scorched.
2. If dehydrated, can dehydration be explained by another cause (root loss, poor watering, etc.)? Does correcting the problem improve the plant (do new growths grow properly when conditions improve)?
3. Seek out/bookmark the St. Augustine Orchid Society website, look for their pages on diseases and pests for Fusarium symptoms. There is also advice there about chemicals that may be used to control various diseases and pests.
4. If, after checking all other possible causes, you can't explain what you are seeing, except as Fusarium, go ahead and cut/check for the purple ring. It is possible to treat Fusarium, I have a Cattleya that had it about 20 years ago, after treatment and recovery, it grows and blooms well.
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