L 75 Not everything that scales is fungus Flashcards

1
Q

Tinea Versicolor

Pityriasis

A

Hyper or Hypo pigmented patches of skin lesions that fluoresce under black light, tend to be on upper back of young adults.
Bug is M. globosa or M. furfur both are normal flora
Common in warm and humid climates
Spaghetti and meatball hyphal pattern, observed with KOH
Treated with slenium sulfide or ketoconazole shampoo/wash

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2
Q

Tinea Pedis

A

3 Varieties:
1) Hyperkeratotic (moccasin): most difficult to treatment, T. rubrum, use creams for 4 weeks or oral for 1-2 weeks, rarely in between the toes

2) Intertriginous: antifungal gels or sprays X 4 weeks, if white or dark colored might need antibacterial treatment, gentian violet works well to dry and kill, or castellani’s paint, keep feet dry
3) Vesiculobullous (least common) has blisters, T. mentagrophytes, vesicles by immune reaction, often on non-weight-bearing surfaces, topical antifungal works

A fungal infection of the skin
Diagnosed by KOH, or DTM (dermatophyte test medium)

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3
Q

Tinea Manuum

A

Often unilateral

Similar to corporis–annular lesions

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4
Q

Tinea Cruris

A

Groin/buttock

Lotions or oral

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5
Q

Tinea Corporis

A

Annular lesions
Often require oral antifungals
Occasionally pustular lesions

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6
Q

Tinea Capitis

A

Kids more likely

Diffuse scaling and alopecia

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7
Q

Tinea Barbae

A

Beard dermatophyte infection

Invades hair follicles => inflammation

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8
Q

Tinea Nigra

A

Not dermatophyte infection
Caused by Hortaea
Pigmented scaly lesions
Topical antifungals and kertolytics

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9
Q

Majocchi Granuloma

A

Commonly lower legs of young women
Deeper invasion than other dermatophyte infections
Granulomatous papules with inflammation and scaling
Will not respond to topical anti-fungals, oral for 4-6 weeks

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10
Q

Two foot, one hand

A

Scale without inflammation
Nail involvement on one hand is pathopneumonic
Oral antifungal required

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11
Q

Candidiasis

A
Most commonly in kids (oral thrush)
Immune deficiency common
White creamy papules on mucosa
Must keep the skin dry–a barrier to the skin may be needed to prevent moisture
Topical and oral antifungals needed
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12
Q

Mucocutaneous Candidiasis

A

Primary immune deficiency syndrome
Recurring infections around nails
Onset in early childhood
Can spread to the lungs

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13
Q

What is the classic sign on nails for Psoriasis?

A

Pitting and oil drop

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14
Q

Methods to diagnose fungal nail infections

A
KOH
DTM
PAS Stain
Fungal Cultures
PCR
(only last two will give specific organism)
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15
Q

Nail fungal treatments

A

Efinaconazole (Jublia)
Tavaborole (Kerydin)

Tea Tree Oil
Funginail
Mycoside

Systemic:
Terbinafine
Itraconazole
Fluconazole
Griseofulvin (only one for kids)
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