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1. Fungal Infections of the Skin and Nails Adam O. Goldstein, MD, MPH
Associate Professor
Department of Family Medicine
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
aog@med.unc.edu
2. Fungal Infections of the Skin and Nails Objectives
1. To distinguish common fungal infections from similar appearing lesions; e.g. eczema
2. Improved dx of fungal lesions with a KOH scraping
3. Know at least 2 tx options for common fungal infections of the skin & nails
4. Know common errors in fungal dx and tx
5. Know when to suspect & how to dx ID reaction
3. Sorry… but ….
4. Superficial Fungal Infections 4.1 million visits -82% nondermatologists
3 types of fungi-dermatophytes:
Epidermophyton
Trichophyton
Microsporum
Named by location
Similar treatments; Varied presentations
5. If they do this to food…..
6. Superficial Fungal Infections Common Denominator = Do KOH, Do KOH, Do KOH ..
Nondermatologists (34%) were more likely than dermatologists (5%) to prescribe combination products for the treatment of common fungal skin infections; savings = $10-25 million.
(Smith, JAAD,1998)
7. KOH
8. ID Reaction Severe inflammatory skin reaction
Immunologically mediated
Appearance may be very different from original lesion
Fungal infections if severe enough may provoke ID reaction. If you do not think about it, you will not diagnose it.
10. Tinea capitis Trichophyton or Microsporum species
Disease of children
Exposure from other children or pets
Highly variable presentation
11. T. capitis Primary lesions: plaques, papules, pustules or nodules
Secondary lesions: scale, alopecia, erythema, exudate and edema
Kerion: Severe T. capitis- inflamed, boggy nodule with hair loss
12. Kerion
13. T. capitis Diagnosis
Overdiagnosed in adults, underdiagnosed in children
Direct microscopic exam of hairs looking for hyphae/spores
Woods lamp: bright green fluorescence in hair shafts d/t Microsporum infection (< 20% time)
Culture: If KOH is negative but strong clinical suspicion
14. T. capitis Differential Diagnosis
Seborrheic dermatitis- rare in children, KOH -
Cellulitis- may coexist, KOH -
Alopecia areata-discrete, nonscaling areas hair loss
Syphilis- “mothball eaten” areas
15. The diagnosis please…..
16. T. capitis Treatment
Systemic therapy needed
Griseofulvin at least 8 wks (Or 2 wks beyond cure)
Itraconazole- 3-5mg/kg/day 1x/week 3 weeks
Fluconazole- 3-6 mg/kg children (10, 40 ml)
Terbinafine - 3-6mg/kg/day X 4 weeks
17. Griseofulvin Microsize 250, 500 mg tabs, 125 mg/5 cc susp
500-1000 mg/day adults
15-20 mg/kg/day children
SE’s: photosensitivity, H/A, GI upset, hypersensitivity, leukopenia
Active only against dermatophytes, not yeasts
18. T. capitis Patient education
Compliance for 2 weeks beyond “cure” to prevent relapse
Look for sources of infections
Clean contaminated objects
Reassure caretakers that it may take 1 month for improvement
20. Tinea barbae Characteristics
Inflammation in the beard/hair
Pseudofolliculitis
Frequently “failed” antibiotics
Positive S.Aureus culture does not rule out T. barbae
21. T. barbae Diagnosis
Nodular, boggy lesions with exudate
Sinus tract formation
Scarring if untreated
KOH or culture may confirm
22. T. barbae Differential diagnosis
Bacterial folliculitis
Pseudofolliculitis barbae
Contact dermatitis
Herpes
Syphilis
Acne
Candida
23. T. barbae Treatment
Griseofulvin 0.5-1 g/day
Itraconazole or terbinafine for resistant cases
Local care
24. Tinea corporis Papules or plaques with erythema and scale
Look for annular lesions with central clearing
Well-demarcated edges
25. T. corporis Diagnosis
KOH from leading edge
Prior steroid use alters response/appearance
Majocchi’s granuloma: pluck hairs for hyphae
26. T. corporis vs. Majocchi’s granuloma
27. T. corporis Differential diagnosis
Nummular eczema KOH neg
Pityriasis rosea KOH neg, multiple papules/plaques
Psoriasis KOH neg, thick, silvery scales
Granuloma annulare KOH neg, no scale
Lyme disease KOH neg, no scale
28. T. corporis: Differential diagnosis
29. The diagnosis please...
30. T. corporis Treatment
Avoid “Lotrisone” type combos
Topical agents for mild/moderate disease
Oral agents for extensive/resistant disease
Continue topical medication 7-14 days beyond “cure”
32. Tinea cruris Thrives in humid environments
Diagnosis:
Spares scrotum;
Pruritus & burning clues
Look for feet as possible infection source
KOH + hyphae
33. T.cruris Differential Diagnosis:
Candida Beefy red with poorly defined borders
Intertrigo KOH negative, irritant dermatitis
Erythrasma Asymmetric velvety patches, Neg KOH
Psoriasis Thick silvery scales,Neg KOH
Seb derm Borders less defined, distribution different, Neg KOH
34. T. cruris Treatment
Topical agents for 2-3 weeks
Mild topical steroid for inflammatory component
Pruritus relief
Look for infection source
35. T. cruris Patient education
Use topical meds 7-14 days beyond cure
Avoid prolonged topical steroids
Avoid self-medicating preps
Avoid baths and tight fitting underwear
Use mild soaps or soap substitute
Antifungal powders
Keep area dry
36. Tinea manus Diagnosis:
Often unilateral, but with bilateral feet
May have only scant scaling, vesicles
Differential Diagnosis: Eczema, contact dermatitis
Treatment: Topical agents
37. The diagnosis is ...
38. Tinea pedis Diagnosis:
Extremely variable presentation
Be aware of id reaction and bacterial infection
39. T. pedis
40. The diagnosis is …..
42. Tinea Versicolor Diagnosis: macules, plaques; fine scale after scraping; KOH +
43. Tinea Versicolor Treatment:
Limited disease: Topical agents
Widespread: Ketoconazole
200 mg X 2 one dose, repeat 1 week
(Not griseofulvin)
Prevention and Patient Education:
Selenium sulfide 2.5% overnight 1X/month
44. Candidiasis Diagnosis: Beefy red lesions, satellite papules and pustules
Differential Dx: Tinea, Intertrigo
Treatment and Patient education :
Topical antifungal creams
Oral therapy for extensive (not Griseofulvin)
Environmental: Zeasorb powder or Burow’s
Mild topical steroids
45. The diagnosis is...
46. Onychomycosis
47. Onychomycosis Why should we treat? (cosmetically disfiguring, painful, entry for cellulitis)
Diff Dx: Psoriasis, Lichen Planus, Trauma
Diagnosing vs. treating
48. Diagnosis?
Culture?
Treatment?
50. CaseWhich of the following, if any, is onychomycosis?
51. Onychomycosis- treatments 8% Ciclopirox (Penlac)
Topical therapy: FDA approved (2/00)
2 studies X 48 weeks:
219 5.5% cc 6.5% ac vs. .9% placebo
235 8.5% cc 12% ac vs. .9% placebo
se: erythema 5%
1x/day for seven days, remove w/alcohol and begin again
52. Onychomycosis- systemic Oral meds:
Terbinafine- 250 mg qd X 6 wks Fingernails;
X 12 wks Toenails
Itraconazole- 200 mg bid 1 wk/month
X 2-3 months Fingernails;
X 3-4 months Toenails
Fluconazole- 150-300 mg 1x/week x 6-9 months
Side effects: GI, Skin, H/A, LFT, Drugs
53. Onychomycosis- oral meds RCT-DB, PC-
72 week f/u
496 patients
Continuous terbinafine vs. pulsed itraconazole
No diff. SE’s
T3 T4 I8 I4
MC 76% 81% 38% 49%
CC 54% 60% 32% 32%
(BMJ, 4/99, 318: 1031-1035)
54. Pooled analysis trials comparing mycological cure rates
Continuous treatment with terbinafine (250 mg/d for 12 weeks) & continuous treatment with itraconazole (200 mg/d for 12 weeks)
Statistically significant difference in 1 year outcomes in favor of terbinafine (risk difference, -0.23 [95% confidence interval, -0.32 to -0.15]; number needed to treat, 5 [95% confidence interval, 4 to 8]).
55. Evidence-based review- Fungal Oral treatments for T. Pedis
Twelve trials, 700 participants
2 trials comparing terbinafine and griseofulvin
A pooled risk difference of 52% (95% confidence intervals 33% to 71%) in favor of terbinafine's ability to cure infection
(The Cochrane Library, 2003, http://www.update software.com/abstracts/ab003584.htm)
56. Summary Do a KOH when possible or doubtful
Avoid brand name combination steroid/antifungal products
Remember patient education strategies
57. Pearls T. capitis- overdiagnosed in adults/under in children; oral therapy needed
T. cruris- spares scrotum
T. manus- often unilateral
T. Pedis- highly variable presentation
T. versicolor- oral therapy effective
Onychomycosis- oral meds needed
59. What’s the diff dx?
How to dx?
Use combo meds?
How to tx?
60. Diff dx:
SCCa, Eczema, Tinea
How to dx:
KOH, KOH, KOH
Use combo meds: NO
wrong 30%
unclear length of time
more difficult for subsequent dx
$$$
potent steroids
Tx: Lidex 0.05% bid
65. Thank You …….