نتایج جستجو برای: tinea capitis

تعداد نتایج: 3245  

Journal: :Mycoses 2002
M S Ali-Shtayeh A-A M Salameh S I Abu-Ghdeib Rana M Jamous H Khraim

A study of tinea capitis was carried out during October 1998, involving 8531 school children aged 6-14 years (4718 males and 3813 females), attending 12 primary schools located in urban, rural, and refugee camp communities in the Nablus district in the Palestinian Authority. A total of approximately 1389 of the school children aged 6-12 years (724 males and 665 females) were also surveyed on th...

Journal: :Revista da Sociedade Brasileira de Medicina Tropical 2007
Mohsin M Sidat Della Correia Titos Paulo Buene

This study evaluated the prevalence of Tinea capitis among schoolchildren at one primary school and also identified the causative agents. Scalp flakes were collected from children presenting clinical signs suggestive of Tinea capitis. Dermatophytes were identified by following standard mycological procedures. This study found a clinical prevalence of Tinea capitis of 9.6% (110/1149). The dermat...

2016
Enzo Errichetti Giuseppe Stinco

Clinical distinction between pityriasis amiantacea-like tinea capitis and pityriasis amiantacea due to noninfectious inflammatory diseases is a troublesome task, with a significant likelihood of diagnostic errors/delays and prescription of inappropriate therapies. We report a case of pityriasis amiantacea-like tinea capitis with its dermoscopic findings in order to highlight the usefulness of d...

Journal: :The new microbiologica 2008
Sara Asticcioli Adriano Di Silverio Laura Sacco Ilaria Fusi Luca Vincenti Egidio Romero

We studied dermatophyte infections in patients attending the Dermatology Outpatients Clinic of S. Matteo hospital Pavia, Italy, during the period 2004-2006. A total of 100 samples were collected from 95 patients; 97 dermatophytes and 3 keratinophylic fungi were isolated. Trichophyton rubrum was the most frequent dermatophyte isolated (42.3%), followed by Microsporum canis (31%), T. mentagrophyt...

Journal: :Nippon Ishinkin Gakkai Zasshi 2011

2014
Olusola Ayanlowo Ayesha Akinkugbe Rita Oladele Mobolanle Balogun

Dermatophyte infection is a common skin disorder. Tinea capitis, infection of the scalp and hair shaft, is the most common dermatophytosis in children aged between six months and pre-pubertal age. The aim of the study was to determine the prevalence, causative agents and to identify predisposing factors among primary school children in a rural community in Sagamu, Ogun state, Nigeria. This was ...

2014
Abd-Elaziz El-Taweel Fatma El-Esawy Osama Abdel-Salam

Background. Diagnosis of patchy hair loss in pediatric patients is often a matter of considerable debate among dermatologists. Trichoscopy is a rapid and noninvasive tool to detect more details of patchy hair loss. Like clinical dermatology, trichoscopy works parallel to the skin surface and perpendicular to the histological plane; like the histopathology, it thus allows the viewing of structur...

2017
Rasha H. Bassyouni Naglaa A. El-Sherbiny Talal A. Abd El Raheem Basma H. Mohammed

BACKGROUND Tinea capitis remains a prevalent health problem among school-aged children. OBJECTIVE To estimate the prevalence of tinea capitis among primary school students, in Fayoum, Egypt with identification of etiological agents in both public and private primary schools. METHODS A cross-sectional study was conducted in twelve primary schools. The students were selected from different gr...

Journal: :Acta dermato-venereologica 2009
Mårten C G Winge Erja Chryssanthou Carl-Fredrik Wahlgren

Sir, Dermatophytes are a group of closely-related fungi that are able to invade keratinized tissue (skin, hair and nails) of humans and animals to produce an infection, dermatophytosis, commonly referred to as ringworm or tinea. Important factors leading to the different clinical forms are the infecting fungus, the site infected, the keratinization at that site, and the immune status of the hos...

Journal: :Pediatric dermatology 2011
Marijana Atanasovski Abdel Kader El Tal Fasahat Hamzavi David A Mehregan

Tinea capitis is a common fungal infection in children but rare among neonates. We present a case of a 3-week-old infant with multiple scalp lesions for 1 week. A diagnosis of tinea capitis due to Microsporum canis was made based on clinical morphology, Wood's lamp, and biopsy with a positive PAS stain. She was effectively treated with oral griseofulvin and ketoconazole shampoo.

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