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Case Report of Onychomycosis and Tinea Corporis Due to Microsporum gypseum. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Microsporum gypseum is a dermatophyte found in soil, primarily affecting keratinous materials, and can cause skin infections in humans, including tinea corporis and tinea capitis, though it rarely causes nail infections (onychomycosis).
  • A case study details a 32-year-old man's infection linked to a pet rat he adopted 10 years ago, where nail and skin symptoms were diagnosed and treated successfully with terbinafine over a total of 12 weeks.
  • The rise in M gypseum onychomycosis cases is attributed to the fungus evolving from a soil organism to a human pathogen, likely influenced by increased interactions with domestic animals; treatment typically requires

Article Abstract

Background: Microsporum gypseum is a geophilic dermatophyte that colonises keratinous substances in the soil. Fur-bearing animals carry this dermatophyte but are rarely infected. Human infection can be acquired from the soil, carrier or infected animals, and rarely other humans. M gypseum is an uncommon cause of cutaneous infection in humans and typically manifests as tinea corporis, tinea barbae, and tinea capitis. Onychomycosis is rarely caused by M gypseum.

Case Summary: We present a case of a 32-year-old white man who presented with a red scaly rash and nail dystrophy after adopting a pet rat 10 years prior to presentation. A fungal culture of a nail clipping grew out M gypseum, and the patient was treated with terbinafine daily for 6 weeks for dystrophic onychomycosis and tinea corporis. After the 6 weeks of treatment, the erythema at the proximal nail fold and distal finger had improved but still persisted. An additional 6 weeks of terbinafine daily completely resolved the clinical manifestations of onychomycosis.

Conclusion: The increase in incidence of M gypseum onychomycosis over the past 2 decades is thought to be due to phylogenetic evolution of the dermatophyte from soil saprophyte to a human parasite. Increasing domestication of mammals is also thought to contribute to increasing incidence. Treatment consists of an extended course of terbinafine or itraconazole.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1203475417724439DOI Listing

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