Tinea versicolor: Difference between revisions

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==Differential Diagnosis==  
==Differential Diagnosis==  
*Pityriasis Alba
{{Pigmentation Change DDX}}
*Guttate Psoriasis
*Seborrheic Dermatitis
*Tinea Corporis
*Vitiligo


==Diagnosis==
==Diagnosis==

Revision as of 13:29, 9 June 2015

Background

  • Caused by fungus Pityrosporum ovale (oval form) or obiculare
  • Also known as Malassezia furfur

Clinical Features

  • Hypopigmented or hyperpigmented lesions predominantly on the trunk
  • More common in areas of increased sebaceous glands
  • Equally common is light and dark skinned individuals, but more noticeable in the later

Differential Diagnosis

Hyperpigmentation

Hypopigmentation

  • Vitiligo
  • Pityriasis alba
  • Tinea versicolor
  • Postinflammatory hypopigmentation
  • Piebaldism
  • Tuberous sclerosis
  • Hypomelanosis of Ito

Diagnosis

  • Some demonstrate coppery-orange fluoresence under Woods Lamp
  • KOH wet prep (Spaghetti and Meatballs appearance)
  • Almost never cultured given difficult culture medium, benign course, and diagnostic KOH prep.

Management

  • First line topical treatment is ketoconazole (nightly application x 2 weeks) or selenium sulfide (10 minutes x bid)
  • Single dose 400mg ketoconazole PO or fluconazole 150-300mg PO per week x 2-4 weeks for more resistant cases or for easy-of-use
  • Griseofulvin is not effective

See Also

References