Literature DB >> 16863519

A twenty-year survey of dermatophytoses in Braga, Portugal.

G L Valdigem1, T Pereira, C Macedo, M L Duarte, P Oliveira, P Ludovico, A Sousa-Basto, C Leão, F Rodrigues.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Modifications in social habits together with the increase of emigration have contributed not only to increased dermatophytoses but also to an altered etiology. During the last few years, Braga has suffered a radical change from a rural to a cosmopolitan life-style.
METHODS: A statistical study of dermatophytoses and the etiology of their causative agents was performed by a retrospective survey carried out among patients of Hospital de São Marcos, Braga, Portugal, from 1983-2002. In this study, a total of 10,003 patients were analyzed.
RESULTS: Over this period the frequency of dermatophytoses, as defined by the recovery of a dermatophyte in culture, was found to be 23.6%, whereas nondermatophytic infections accounted for 7.0%. Analysis of the clinical forms and the isolated fungi supports that the dermatophyte species have a predilection for certain body areas (P <or= 0.01). Age is a very important factor regarding the occurrence of dermatophytoses (P <or= 0.0001), with a correlation between increasing age and infection, positive for Trichophyton rubrum and negative for Microsporum canis. Overall the gender of the patients is not an association factor for the development of dermatophytoses; however, significant differences were detected in the distribution of some etiologic agents (P <or= 0.05).
CONCLUSIONS: The results showed the main etiologic agent of dermatophytoses to be Trichophyton rubrum (37.4%). Moreover, dermatophytoses are both decreasing and showing a new profile in Braga, and a pronounced decrease of Trichophyton megninii was observed throughout the study.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16863519     DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-4632.2006.02886.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Dermatol        ISSN: 0011-9059            Impact factor:   2.736


  5 in total

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Authors:  R Sabino; C Verissímo; J Brandão; C Martins; D Alves; C Pais; D W Denning
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2.  Toenail onychomycosis in a Portuguese geriatric population.

Authors:  N Dias; C Santos; M Portela; N Lima
Journal:  Mycopathologia       Date:  2011-03-02       Impact factor: 2.574

3.  Epidemiological Survey of Human Dermatophytosis due to Zoophilic Species in Tehran, Iran.

Authors:  Babak Hassanzadeh Rad; Seyed Jamal Hashemi; Maryam Farasatinasab; Javaneh Atighi
Journal:  Iran J Public Health       Date:  2018-12       Impact factor: 1.429

4.  Clinicomycological study of 150 cases of dermatophytosis in a tertiary care hospital in South India.

Authors:  H Hanumanthappa; K Sarojini; P Shilpashree; Sushmita Bhimsen Muddapur
Journal:  Indian J Dermatol       Date:  2012-07       Impact factor: 1.494

5.  Growth Inhibition and Morphological Alterations of Trichophyton Rubrum Induced by Essential oil from Cymbopogon Winterianus Jowitt Ex Bor.

Authors:  Fillipe de Oliveira Pereira; Paulo Alves Wanderley; Fernando Antônio Cavalcanti Viana; Rita Baltazar de Lima; Frederico Barbosa de Sousa; Edeltrudes de Oliveira Lima
Journal:  Braz J Microbiol       Date:  2011-01       Impact factor: 2.476

  5 in total

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