| Literature DB >> 30775313 |
Sidharth Sonthalia1, Sangeeta Varma2, Abhijeet K Jha3.
Abstract
Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30775313 PMCID: PMC6362734 DOI: 10.4103/idoj.IDOJ_35_18
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Indian Dermatol Online J ISSN: 2229-5178
Figure 1(a) Dermoscopy of the pubic region of the patient revealing a “miniature crab”-like light grey-brown colored pubic louse with six legs and the pubic hairs firmly grasped in its claws over the forelegs (Escope, videodermoscope, ×10, polarized). (b) Dermoscopy of a plucked pubic hair displaying a brown-colored viable nit with an operculum at one end (red arrow) (Escope, videodermoscope, ×10, polarized)
Figure 2(a) Dermoscopic appearance of male head louse. Appreciate its larger size and darker color (dark tan to grayish-brown) compared with pubic louse observed in Figure 1a (Escope, videodermoscope, ×10, polarized). (b) Dermoscopic appearance of a pseudonit (yellow arrow). A white, bizarrely shaped amorphous structure, representing a dandruff flake over the hair shaft of a patient with seborrheic dermatitis of the scalp (Escope, videodermoscope, ×10, polarized)