| Literature DB >> 35340734 |
Abstract
Demodicosis is caused by Demodex mite infestation and can present with a variety of clinical manifestations, including pityriasis folliculorum type, rosacea-like type, folliculitis-like type and perioral dermatitis-like type. Therefore, this skin condition is often misdiagnosed or underdiagnosed. This report presents a 19-year-old woman with a history of pityriasis folliculorum type demodicosis and successful treatment with oral ivermectin. After one year of remission, the patient began to develop a dry, itchy rash on her face for one month before multiple small edematous papules and pustules gradually appeared on both cheeks. The patient was first diagnosed as acne vulgaris and treated with doxycycline for 2 weeks, but the clinical symptoms did not show any signs of improvement. After reassessment based on clinical presentation and laboratory examination that found multiple Demodex mites from pustules and rash on both cheeks, the patient was diagnosed with folliculitis-like type demodicosis. However, this patient still had a very good response to oral ivermectin and metronidazole gel, and all clinical symptoms disappeared within 4 weeks after treatment. This is a case report of demodicosis imitating acne vulgaris and the first report demonstrating a change in clinical manifestations of demodicosis from pityriasis folliculorum type to folliculitis-like type.Entities:
Keywords: Demodex mite; acne vulgaris; demodicosis; folliculitis-like demodicosis; pityriasis folliculorum
Year: 2022 PMID: 35340734 PMCID: PMC8942344 DOI: 10.2147/CCID.S358000
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Cosmet Investig Dermatol ISSN: 1178-7015
Figure 1Dry erythematous patch, follicular scales and rough skin with “sandpaper-like” texture on the right cheek.
Figure 2Dry, patchy erythema on face and upper part of the neck combined with multiple small edematous erythematous papules and minute whitish papules, size 3–5 mm, discrete on the right cheek.
Figure 3Multiple Demodex mites are detected by standardized skin surface biopsy from the rash on the right cheek.
Figure 4(A–C) Demodex mites are detected by superficial needle-scraping with methylene blue staining from pustular lesions on both cheeks.