TINEA CAPITIS IN NORTHWESTERN EUROPE 1963–1993: ETIOLOGIC AGENTS AND THEIR CHANGING PREVALENCE
- 1 August 1994
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in International Journal of Dermatology
- Vol. 33 (8) , 548-549
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-4362.1994.tb02892.x
Abstract
Background. Although tinea capitis is endemic in many countries, its prevalence in Northwestern Europe (Belgium and the Netherlands) has not been established. Materials and Methods. Scales, pus, and hair were examined from 435 cases of tinea capitis for etiologic agents and their relative percentages calculated for 5-year periods between 1963 and 1992. Results. There was a change in organisms associated with tinea capitis in the Netherlands from Trichophyton schoenleinii to Trichophyton violaceum. Increased immigration from the Mediterranean is held partly responsible for the increased prevalence of T. violaceum infections. Infection with zoophilic dermatophytes, such as T. canis, has also become more frequent in the Netherlands. Conclusions. The zoophilic dermatophytes have supplanted the anthropophilic dermatophytes as the cause of tinea capitis in the Netherlands.Keywords
This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- A study of tinea capitis in Sri LankaMedical Mycology, 1989
- Distribution and Frequency of Dermatophytes in the City of Rome Between 1978 and 1983. Verbreitung und Häufigkeit von Dermatophyten in Rom zwischen 1978 und 1983Mycoses, 1987
- Epidemiology of the Dermatophytoses in the Florence Area: 1982–84.1. Microsporum canis Infections*Mycoses, 1986
- Dermatophytes in Portugal (1972?1981)Mycopathologia, 1984
- Tinea capitis in TripoliClinical and Experimental Dermatology, 1984
- Dermatophytes and Dermatophytosis in Denmark 1979: Dermatophyten und Dermatophytosis in Dänemark 1979Mycoses, 1982
- Etiology of ringworm of the scalp, beard and body in Rome, ItalyMedical Mycology, 1980