Dermatomycosis

Medical condition
Dermatomycosis
Micrograph of a superficial dermatomycosis. The fungal organisms are the dark staining, thick, quasi-linear objects below with skin surface. Vulvar biopsy. GMS stain.
SpecialtyInfectious diseases Edit this on Wikidata
SymptomsThese fungal infections impair superficial layers of the skin, hair and nails.

A dermatomycosis is a skin disease caused by a fungus.[1]

The most frequent form is dermatophytosis (ringworm, tinea). Another example is cutaneous candidiasis. These fungal infections impair superficial layers of the skin, hair and nails.

Literature

  • Pietro Nenoff, Constanze Krüger, Gabriele Ginter-Hanselmayer, Hans-Jürgen Tietz (2014) Mycology – an update. Part 1: Dermatomycoses: Causative agents, epidemiology and pathogenesis

References

  1. ^ "dermatomycosis" at Dorland's Medical Dictionary

External links

Classification
D
  • ICD-10: B35-B36
  • ICD-9-CM: 110-111
  • MeSH: D003881
  • DiseasesDB: 32449
  • SNOMED CT: 14560005
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Fungal infection and mesomycetozoea
Superficial and
cutaneous
(dermatomycosis):
Tinea = skin;
Piedra (exothrix/
endothrix) = hair
Ascomycota
Dermatophyte
(Dermatophytosis)
By location
By organism
Other
Basidiomycota
Subcutaneous,
systemic,
and opportunistic
Ascomycota
Dimorphic
(yeast+mold)
Onygenales
Other
Yeast-like
Mold-like
Basidiomycota
Zygomycota
(Zygomycosis)
Mucorales
(Mucormycosis)
Entomophthorales
(Entomophthoramycosis)
Microsporidia
(Microsporidiosis)
Mesomycetozoea
Ungrouped
Authority control databases: National Edit this at Wikidata
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  • Czech Republic


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