Chapter 4
Chapter 4
Chapter 4
Three
Cutaneous mycoses
Cutaneous mycoses
Epidemiology
• Tinea capitis has a worldwide distribution.
• It is most frequent in prepubescent children.
⚫ Mainly affects and quickly disseminated among
children.
⚫ It occurs most often in those living under
crowded conditions.
⚫ The clinical presentations offer a practical way
of classifying the disease.
• Are four types: gray patch, black dot,
inflammatory,
Source and epidemiology
Source of infection
⚫ Have specific geographical distribution.
⚫ Anthropophilic species spread directly
by means of infected hairs on hats, caps,
upholstery, combs or barber clippers.
⚫ Zoophilic species transmitted from animals
to man (puppies and kitten).
1. Gray Patch Tinea
Capitis
• The hallmark is a round or oval, sharply demarcated
patch of partial alopecia.
• The hair is reduced to short stubble by the tendency
of
infected hairs to break off just above the skin.
• Several patches may coalesce to form extensive areas of
hair loss.
• Due to M. canis and is still common worldwide.
• Microsporum spp. cause ectothrix infections.
• It produces a yellow–green fluorescence under Wood’s
light examination.
Gray Patch Tinea
Capitis
2. Black Dot Tinea
C apitis
• Endothrix infection of hair causes the shafts to break off at or
below the surface of the scalp, leaving only arthroconidia
laden stubs visible.
• When the hairs are black, this result in the appearance of
black dots.
• Lesions are often multiple, scattered, irregularly shaped
patches of alopecia with indistinct borders.
• Scaling may be a prominent feature.
• Trichophyton tonsurans is by far the most common;
• T. violaceum is sometimes the causative organism but T.
rubrum is only rarely isolated.
• Do not fluoresce under Wood’s light examination.
Black Dot Tinea
Capitis
3. Inflammatory Tinea
Capitis
• Caused by T. tonsurans; it’s an inflammatory disease.
• Zoophilic and geophilic species may induce a severe
combined inflammatory and hypersensitivity reaction called a
kerion.
• The lesions may be tender and painful.
• Begin as small furuncles, which over a short period, enlarge
and become more inflamed and develop abscess and pus.
• In worst cases, kerions become a sharply delineated,
indurated, granulomatous tumefaction, sometimes referred
to as a “boggy mass.” (soft & watery mass)
• Untreated kerion may result in permanent scarring alopecia.
Inflammatory Tinea
Capitis
Microsporum
• Infected hairs show the fungus as a mosaic sheath of
small spores surrounding the hair shaft. (Ectothrix)
• Immediately recognized by the presence of large,
spindle-shaped, echinulate (covered with small
spines), rough-walled macroconidia with thick walls
containing four or more septa, as well as lesser
numbers of small and club-shaped
microconidia.
• Infected hair shafts fluoresce yellow-green using a
Wood’s lamp.
Laboratory diagnosis
Trichophyton
• Hairs infected with Trichophyton species show arthrospores arranged
in parallel rows inside or outside the hair and appearing either in
chains of small arthrospores or chains of large arthrospores .
• Trichophyton do not fluoresce under the ultraviolet (UV) light of a
Wood’s lamp.
• In this genus, the microconidia are diagnostic while the macroconidia
are not.
• There are two characteristic arrangements of the microconidia the "en
thyrse" and "en grappe" arrangements.
• Help distinguish this organism from similarly appearing genera:
• En grape refers to microconidia in clumps at the ends of the hyphae.
• En thyrse refers to microconidia that form along
the sides of the hyphae.
Microsporum
audouinii
Microorganisms Fluorescence Color
Methenamine Detection of fungi in Best stain to detect fungal Requires a specialized staining
silver stain histologic section elements method
• Trichophyton schoenleinii
• Colonies (SDA) are slow growing, waxy or suede-like with a
deeply folded honeycomb-like thallus and some sub-surface
growth.
• The thallus is cream-coloured to yellow to orange brown.
• Without any color on the reverse side.
• Main identifying characteristics include lack of both micro- and
macroconidia.
• The formation of “favic chandeliers” which are antler-like
structures at the tips of hyphae.
Trichophyton
schoenleinii
Epidemophyton
•
floccosum
Only one pathogenic species in this genus.
• Epidemophyton floccosum is numerous club-shaped, smooth
walled macroconidia with two to four cells occurring is singly
or in clusters of three to four;
• Microcondia absent.
Epidemophyton
floccosum
⚫ E. floccosum is an anthropophilic dermatophyte with a
world-wide distribution which often causes tinea pedis,
tinea cruris, tinea corporis and onychomycosis.
⚫ On SDA: Colonies are usually slow growing, greenish-
brown or khaki coloured with a suede-like surface, raised
and folded in the centre, with a flat periphery and
submerged fringe of growth.
⚫ Reverse side is yellow-brown or dark orange with folds.
⚫ Key features include characteristic greenish-brown or
khaki coloured cultures, the production of smooth, thin-
walled, club-shaped macroconidia and the absence of
microconidia.
Epidemophyton
floccosum
Tinea barbae
• Tinea barbae is a chronic fungal infection of the bearded
area of the face and neck, hence being restricted to adult
males.
• Synonyms: barbers’ itch, ringworm of the beard,
tinea sycosis, trichophytosis barbae
• The most common causes are T. mentagrophytes and T.
verrucosum.
• Characterized by both superficial lesions, resembling those
of tinea corporis, and deeper types of infection resulting
from involvement of the hair follicles.
Tinea barbae
Geographical distribution
• Tinea barbae, frequently seen in Europe, has recently
become prevalent in USA particularly in areas where
cattle are raised or fed.
Source of infection
• The infection is transmitted from cattle to man i.e. usually
zoophilic and an occupational hazard for farm workers.
• Farmers are highly affected by this infection
Pathogenesis