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diseasePityrosporum Folliculitis
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bubble_chart Overview

Pityrosporum folliculitis is a folliculitis alteration caused by round or oval Pityrosporum, characterized by dome-shaped follicular papule or pustule-like lesions.

bubble_chart Clinical Manifestations

  1. More common in young adults;
  2. Skin lesions are prone to occur on the chest, back, and upper arms;
  3. The skin lesions manifest as dome-shaped follicular papules or pustule-like lesions, 2–4 mm in diameter, and are ineffective when treated as acne.

bubble_chart Diagnosis

  1. Skin lesions are commonly found on the chest, back, and upper arms;
  2. Typical manifestations of skin lesions;
  3. Direct microscopic examination of scales reveals short rod-shaped hyphae and round spores;
  4. Histopathology of the skin lesions (PAS staining) shows a large number of round or oval budding spores within the hair follicles.

bubble_chart Treatment Measures

Treatment principles:

  1. Administer systemic antifungal medications orally.
  2. Apply topical antifungal preparations externally.

Medication principles:

  1. For localized skin lesions, prioritize external treatment;
  2. for extensive and stubborn lesions, consider systemic antifungal medications.

bubble_chart Cure Criteria

  1. Cure: Skin lesions subside, fungal direct microscopy is negative once a week for two consecutive times, and histopathology of skin lesions (PAS staining) shows negative spores in hair follicles.
  2. Improvement: Skin lesions partially subside, fungal direct microscopy is negative or positive, and histopathology of skin lesions (PAS staining) shows positive spores in hair follicles.
  3. No cure: Skin lesions show no improvement, fungal direct microscopy is positive, and histopathology of skin lesions (PAS staining) shows positive spores in hair follicles.

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