Dermatophytosis - A clinico-mycological profile in patients attending to tertiary healthcare centre- An observational study, Dewas, Madhya Pradesh

Dermatophytosis disease was found most common disease worldwide which showed a wide prevalence in tropical country as India and it is a wide importance to know their disease etiology and their clinical presentation. Study objective approaches to determine the clinical variation in Dermatophytosis and the species of fungus isolates which responsible for the infection in this area. In our study 1520 specimens were taken from infected skin, hair and nail screened by 10%-20% KOH mount examination and used Sabouraud’s Dextrose Agar (SDA) medium and Sabouraud’s Dextrose Chloramphenicol and Cycloheximide (SCCA) & Dermatophyte Test Medium (DTM) for culture and incubated at 27°C. Further identification done by slide culture method and lactophenol cotton blue mount. Out of 1520 samples taken, 981(64.54%) were found KOH mount positive for fungal elements and 1076 (70.79%) were found culture positive. (21.64%) was found predominantly among other isolated species. Study was found Tinea corporis (50.39%) as common clinically. The study was highlighted with Tinea corporis being the commonest infection type with variable fungal agents and out of other fungal isolates was found a most common isolate in various clinical conditions.

[1]  Sonal Singh,et al.  The Current Indian Epidemic of Dermatophytosis: A Study on Causative Agents and Sensitivity Patterns , 2020, Indian journal of dermatology.

[2]  K. Varma,et al.  “A clinico epidemiological study of dermatophytosis in a tertiary care center, Ujjain” , 2019, IP Indian Journal of Clinical and Experimental Dermatology.

[3]  Vandana Upadhyay,et al.  Epidemiological characterization of dermatophytes at a tertiary care hospital in Eastern Uttar Pradesh, India , 2019, Current medical mycology.

[4]  Manisha Singh,et al.  DERMATOPHYTOSIS IN AND AROUND MAHABUBNAGAR , 2016 .

[5]  P. Sharma,et al.  Epidemiological studies on Dermatophytosis in human patients in Himachal Pradesh, India , 2014, SpringerPlus.

[6]  L. Vyas,et al.  A Clinicomycological Study of Cutaneous Mycoses in Sawai Man Singh Hospital of Jaipur, North India , 2013, Annals of medical and health sciences research.

[7]  N. Padmaja,et al.  STUDY OF ONYCHOMYCOSIS AT A TERTIARY CARE HOSPITAL IN SOUTH INDIA , 2012 .

[8]  M. Mathur,et al.  "Epizoonosis of dermatophytosis": a clinico- mycological study of dermatophytic infections in central Nepal. , 2012, Kathmandu University medical journal.

[9]  T. Thirunalasundari,et al.  Epidemiology of dermatophytosis in and around Tiruchirapalli, Tamilnadu, India , 2012 .

[10]  G. Yunusa,et al.  Prevalence of Dermatophytes and other associated Fungi among school children , 2012 .

[11]  E. Nweze,et al.  Dermatophytosis in Western Africa: a review. , 2010, Pakistan journal of biological sciences : PJBS.

[12]  M. Ameen,et al.  Epidemiology of superficial fungal infections. , 2010, Clinics in dermatology.

[13]  S. Bassiri-Jahromi,et al.  Epidemiological survey of dermatophytosis in Tehran, Iran, from 2000 to 2005. , 2009, Indian journal of dermatology, venereology and leprology.

[14]  M. Friedrich,et al.  Epidemiological trends in skin mycoses worldwide , 2008, Mycoses.

[15]  A. Kindo,et al.  CLINICO - MYCOLOGICAL PROFILE OF DERMATOPHYTIC SKIN INFECTIONS IN A TERTIARY CARE CENTER - A CROSS SECTIONAL STUDY. , 2007 .

[16]  B. Khanal,et al.  Tinea capitis in eastern Nepal , 2006, International journal of dermatology.

[17]  B. Srikant,et al.  Clinicomycological study of dermatophytosis in Bijapur. , 2004, Indian journal of medical microbiology.

[18]  R. Alaghehbandan,et al.  Epidemiology of Dermatophytoses in an Area South of Tehran, Iran , 2004, Mycopathologia.

[19]  S. Singh,et al.  Profile of dermatophyte infections in Baroda. , 2003, Indian journal of dermatology, venereology and leprology.

[20]  V. Bindu,et al.  Clinico-mycological study of dermatophytosis in Calicut. , 2002, Indian journal of dermatology, venereology and leprology.

[21]  E. Dei Cas,et al.  Parasitic adaptation of pathogenic fungi to mammalian hosts. , 1986, Critical reviews in microbiology.

[22]  E. D. Cas Parasitic adaptation of pathogenic fungi to mammalian hosts. , 1986 .

[23]  Yvonne M Clayton,et al.  Book Review: Medically Important Fungi: A Guide to Identification , 1977 .

[24]  R. D. King,et al.  Transferrin, iron, and dermatophytes. I. Serum dematophyte inhibitory component definitively identified as unsaturated transferrin. , 1975, The Journal of laboratory and clinical medicine.

[25]  J C WILT,et al.  Medical mycology. , 1952, Manitoba medical review.