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1.
Mycoses ; 67(1): e13668, 2024 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37907831

ABSTRACT

This study analyzes the clinical characteristics of patients diagnosed with White Piedra through a systematic review of cases in the literature. A sample of 131 subjects was considered, of which 91.6% were female and most were 18 years of age or younger. Most studies were conducted in Brazil, followed by India, and Mexico. The most common etiologic agent found was Trichosporon spp (34.3%). Most affected patients were asymptomatic (94.6%) and predisposing factors included long hair, use of a hair band or hair accessories, and wet hair. The most common clinical feature was the presence of nodules. The evaluation of treatment effectiveness was hindered by the scarcity of follow-up information in the majority of the studies. It is concluded that White Piedra infection is more common in young women and is associated with hair-related factors.


Subject(s)
Piedra , Trichosporon , Humans , Female , Male , Piedra/diagnosis , Piedra/drug therapy , Piedra/etiology , Hair , Brazil/epidemiology , Mexico/epidemiology
2.
Front Public Health ; 11: 1228008, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37927880

ABSTRACT

Background: In Latin America (LA), the prevalence of dementia is expected to triple to 150 million people by 2050. The 2020 Lancet Commission report identified several modifiable dementia risk factors, yet few social and environmental factors, most relevant to vulnerable regions of LA, were highlighted in this report. We sought to assess the epidemiology of neurocognitive disorders (NCD) in Puente Piedra, one of the most socially and economically vulnerable districts of Lima, the capital of Peru. Methodology: This was a cross-sectional door-to-door observational study that used two-stage household sampling. One young adult (30-59 years) and one older adult (>60 years) per household were enrolled. We collected demographic, clinical, and neurocognitive data. Addenbrooke's Cognitive Examination (young adults) and the RUDAS-PE (older adults) were used, classifying participants as cognitively normal, possible mild NCD, or possible major NCD. Results: We enrolled 247 participants (median age 46 years; 67% female). One-fourth had not completed secondary school and more than 50% completed only secondary school. Most participants were housewives (46%) and 21% did not have health insurance. The overall prevalence of possible NCD was 30% (25.6 and 41.8% among younger adults and older adults, respectively). Among younger adults, those ages 55-59 years more frequently had NCD (70%) compared to younger age ranges. Among older adults, only 3 subjects (4.5%) had major NCD. Conclusion: We found a high frequency of possible NCDs in a socially and economically vulnerable community in Lima, Peru, with younger adults showing levels of NCD higher than expected. Our findings support the need for health systems to incorporate cognitive screenings programs for NCD in younger ages. Future research on NCD would include younger populations, particularly in vulnerable communities.


Subject(s)
Dementia , Piedra , Young Adult , Humans , Female , Aged , Middle Aged , Male , Peru/epidemiology , Cross-Sectional Studies , Neurocognitive Disorders/epidemiology , Neurocognitive Disorders/diagnosis
3.
Parasitology ; 149(12): 1556-1564, 2022 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35924600

ABSTRACT

The aim of this research was to analyse the variability of parasite assemblages on a small spatial scale, by examining carnivore coprolites from the archaeological site Campo Moncada 2 (CM2), Piedra Parada area, Chubut province, Argentina, and comparing the results with those previously obtained from the archaeological site Campo Cerda 1 (CCe1), located in the same area. Six carnivore coprolites from CM2 were analysed: 4 obtained in sub-level 2a and 2 obtained in sub-level 2a/b. Two radiocarbon dates associated with the coprolites placed the samples chronologically between 780 ± 80 and 860 ± 80 years before present. The rehydrated sediments were sieved and then allowed to sediment spontaneously. The sediment was used for parasitological examination under light microscopy. Conservative estimation of total parasite richness resulted in 21 parasitic taxa. The taxa with the highest fecal prevalence (>50%) corresponded to parasites prevalent in modern carnivores (Alaria sp., Toxocara cf. canis, Toxascaris sp., Eucoleus cf. aerophila, Trichuris sp. and Ancylostomatidae gen. sp.). Assuming that the fox coprolites are contemporaneous, the total fecal parasite richness estimated for CM2 and previously for CCe1 was similar. The high total parasite richness found suggests a network of host­parasite relationships that could include regional hunter-gatherers. The results obtained in carnivore coprolites allow us to infer a very diverse biological community in Piedra Parada area, so the regional caves and rockshelters could have a proportional epidemiological importance as parasite exchange nodes.


Subject(s)
Carnivora , Parasites , Piedra , Animals , Paleopathology , Argentina/epidemiology , Fossils , Feces/parasitology
4.
Front Public Health ; 10: 980808, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36711368

ABSTRACT

Background: Elements associated with an increased risk factor for the contagion of COVID-19 in shelters include the turnover and overcrowding of people, time spent in communal areas, daily supply needs, water availability, and sanitation levels. The "Report on the Effects of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Migrants and Refugees," shows that factors such as the shortage of food, supplies, water, sanitizing materials, spaces for healthy distancing, financial resources for rent and essential services, and the lack of medical or psychological care complicated providing care for migrants and applicants seeking international protection. Objective: We describe shelter operations regarding the detection and follow-up of suspected and confirmed COVID-19 cases showing mild symptoms among the migrant population housed in the border cities under study. Methods: We conducted semi-structured, in-depth interviews with study subjects (people in charge, managers, coordinators, shelter directors) from 22 migrant shelters, and 30 with key informants. We studied the cities of Tijuana (Baja California), Nogales (Sonora), Ciudad Juárez (Chihuahua), Piedras Negras (Coahuila), and Heroica Matamoros (Tamaulipas). The research was based on a qualitative methodological design with an ethnographic approach. The information collected was transcribed and systematized into two tables or analytical templates, one for interviews with study subjects, and another for interviews with key actors. Findings: Overall, seventy-eight registered shelters provided accommodation services for migrants in the five cities the study focused on: thirty-seven in Tijuana, five in Nogales, twenty-two in Ciudad Juárez, eight in Piedras Negras, and five plus a camp (six in total) in Matamoros. The major concentration of shelters was in Tijuana (47.4%) and Ciudad Juárez (28.2%). At the beginning of the pandemic, only a few shelter facilities met quarantine and isolation guidelines, such as having separate bathrooms and sufficient space to isolate the "asymptomatic" and "confirmed" from close "contacts". The lack of isolation space and the inability to support the monitoring of patients with COVID-19 posed a challenge for those housed in shelters, forcing many shelters to close or continue operating behind closed doors to avoid becoming a source of infection during the pandemic. Discussion and outlook: Contrary to speculation, during the onset of the pandemic northern border migrant shelters did not become sources of COVID-19 infection. According to the data analyzed from 78 shelters only seven had confirmed cases, and the classification of "outbreak" was applied only in two facilities. Contagion control or containment was successful as the result of following a preventive containment logic, including the isolation of all suspected but unconfirmed cases, without a clear understanding of the human and financial resources required to maintain isolation areas. However, shelters in the study implemented protocols for epidemiological surveillance, control, and prevention with elements that interfered with monitoring spaces, and processes that caused oversights that resulted in underestimating the number of cases. Limitations: Due to travel restrictions imposed to prevent and contain coronavirus infections it was impossible to stay on-site in the cities studied, except for Tijuana, or carry-out recordings of migrants' views in shelters.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Piedra , Transients and Migrants , Humans , COVID-19/epidemiology , Mexico/epidemiology , Pandemics/prevention & control , Follow-Up Studies , Piedra/epidemiology
6.
Repert. med. cir ; 30(1): 89-97, 2021. ilus.
Article in English, Spanish | LILACS, COLNAL | ID: biblio-1349148

ABSTRACT

Se presentan 4 máscaras precolombinas, tres de las cuales son ecuatorianas y una colombiana. Las primeras son de cerámica y se adscriben a la cultura Jama-Coaque y la tercera de concha Spondylus prínceps no tiene adscripción a ninguna en particular del Ecuador prehispánico, por no existir un estudio sistemático en Ecuador sobre la relación de esas máscaras con sus culturas costeras, la colombiana es de cobre. La primera de cerámica ecuatoriana por su tamaño, peso y elementos agregados ­ un material blanco que simula los dientes, tres piedras verdes que parecen los ojos y una incrustación sublabial, un bezote ­ hacen pensar en una máscara mortuoria de un personaje de poder y alto estatus social; la segunda de cerámica por presentar dieciséis nódulos faciales remite al observador a la llamada verruga peruana o bartonelosis, la tercera ecuatoriana fue elaborada posiblemente como un elemento votivo o de ofrenda para exhibir poder o invocar fuerza o protección dado el carácter de gran valor simbólico de esa concha roja. La máscara de cobre del Cauca medio o Quimbaya, en razón a su material, peso y color, con bastante probabilidad fue usada como adorno colocado sobre el pecho del personaje poderoso o de elevado estatus. Se compara la máscara con bartonelosis con otras dos que el autor ya había documentado, la de concha con otra del mismo tipo de material, la máscara de cobre con una pequeña de piedra jadeíta se referencia con una calavera enmascarada que el autor tuvo la oportunidad de estudiar hace varios años. Se concluye sugiriendo los usos tradicionalmente asignados a las máscaras: festivos, mortuorios y como adornos corporales para resaltar el poder de quien las exhibe. Las máscaras con la erupción tipo nódulos debieron jugar un papel similar a las estatuillas en cerámica y piedra que representan patologías con tanto realismo en el arte prehispánico, pudiendo ser una forma de enseñar, dentro de un pensamiento médico empírico analógico, como lo son los moldes en cera, las fotografías, los dibujos y pinturas en la medicina moderna basada en un pensamiento empírico analítico.


Four pre-Columbian masks are presented, three of which are Ecuadorian and one Colombian. The Ecuadorian masks are made of ceramics and ascribe to the Jama-Coaque culture and the third is made of Spondylus prínceps shell, and does not have any ascription to any particular Ecuadorian pre-Hispanic coastal culture, for no systematic study was conducted in Ecuador on the relationship of those masks and coastal cultures. The Colombian mask is made of copper. The first ceramic mask, for its size, weight and additional elements ­ a white material that simulates teeth, three green stones that simulate eyes and a lower labial incrustation, "bezote"- makes one recall a death mask of an individual with significant power and high social status; the second ceramic mask, features sixteen facial nodules which refer the observer to the Peruvian wart or bartonellosis, the third mask was possibly created as a volitional or offering element to exhibit power or evoke the force or protection given the great symbolic value of that red shell. The middle Cauca Quimbaya copper mask was most probably used as an ornament for the chest of a powerful or high class person given its material, weight and color. The mask that resembles bartonellosis is compared with other two masks the author had already examined. The shell mask was compared with another made of the same type of shell, the copper mask with a small jadeite stone mask, a masked skull that the author had the opportunity to examine several years ago.Finally, these interpretations suggest that in addition to the uses traditionally assigned to the masks: festive, funerary and as body adornments to portray the power of the wearer, the masks with the multiple nodular lesions must have served a role similar to that of the ceramic and stone miniature statues which depict pathologies, featuring great realism in pre-Hispanic art, as a way of teaching through an analogical empirical medical thought, the same role played by wax molds, photographs and drawings and paintings in modern medicine, also based on analytical empirical thought.


Subject(s)
Piedra , Ceramics , Masks , Paleopathology , Teaching , Bartonella Infections , Symbolism
7.
Ann Bot ; 125(7): 1077-1089, 2020 06 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32161957

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: The Piedra Chamana fossil forest in northern Peru is an assemblage of angiosperm woods and leaves preserved in volcaniclastic rocks dated to 39 Mya (late Middle Eocene). We analysed the anatomical and morphological features of the fossils to reconstruct the palaeoenvironment during this time of global warmth, taking advantage of the co-occurrence of woods and leaves to compare different proxies and analytical approaches. METHODS: Wood characters analysed include vessel-related functional traits, traits linked to Baileyan trends, and quantitative features such as vessel diameter and density. Diameter-distribution and diameter and position plots are used to represent vessel diameter and arrangement. Leaf margin and area analysis provides additional climate estimates. KEY RESULTS: The fossil woods show many similarities with modern tropical-forest woods and tropical fossil-wood assemblages; closest correspondence within the Neotropics is to semi-deciduous lowland tropical forest with moderate precipitation (~1000-1200 mm). Features unusual for the modern South American tropics are mainly vessel-related characters (semi-ring porosity, grouped vessels, helical vessel thickenings, short vessel elements) linked to water stress or seasonal water availability. Leaf analysis indicates mean annual temperature of 31 °C (n = 19, 100 % entire-margined) and mean annual precipitation of 1290 mm (n = 22, predominantly microphylls and notophylls). CONCLUSIONS: The palaeovegetation was clearly lowland tropical forest with a dry aspect, but anomalous aspects of the wood anatomy are consistent with the high temperatures indicated by the leaves and are probably explained by differences in seasonality and water stress compared to the present-day Neotropics. A close modern analogue may be in very seasonal regions of Asia. Pronounced monsoonal (summer-rain) conditions may relate to a location (palaeolatitude of 13°S) outside the near-equatorial tropics.


Subject(s)
Fossils , Piedra , Asia , Humans , Peru , Plant Leaves , Trees , Tropical Climate , Wood
10.
An Bras Dermatol ; 92(3): 413-416, 2017.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29186263

ABSTRACT

Superficial mycoses are fungal infections restricted to the stratum corneum and to the hair shafts, with no penetration in the epidermis; they are: white piedra, black piedra, tinea versicolor, and tinea nigra. This study presents images of mycological tests performed in the laboratory, as well as exams performed at the authors office, in order to improve the dermatologist's knowledge about the diagnosis of these dermatoses, which are common in many countries.


Subject(s)
Piedra/diagnosis , Tinea/diagnosis , Humans , Piedra/classification , Piedra/pathology , Tinea/classification , Tinea/pathology
11.
An. bras. dermatol ; An. bras. dermatol;92(3): 413-416, May-June 2017. graf
Article in English | LILACS | ID: biblio-886960

ABSTRACT

Abstract Superficial mycoses are fungal infections restricted to the stratum corneum and to the hair shafts, with no penetration in the epidermis; they are: white piedra, black piedra, tinea versicolor, and tinea nigra. This study presents images of mycological tests performed in the laboratory, as well as exams performed at the authors office, in order to improve the dermatologist's knowledge about the diagnosis of these dermatoses, which are common in many countries.


Subject(s)
Humans , Piedra/diagnosis , Tinea/diagnosis , Piedra/classification , Piedra/pathology , Tinea/classification , Tinea/pathology
12.
Exp Dermatol ; 25(1): 79-81, 2016 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26476093

ABSTRACT

White piedra is a fungal infection characterized by nodules comprised of Trichosporon species and restricted to the extrafollicular portion of the hair shaft. The diagnosis is based on clinical and mycological characteristics, and must be confirmed with a precise identification of the etiological agent. This research aimed to develop an in vitro infection model of white piedra and analyze its morphological and ultra-structural aspects. In the process, hair infection was induced using eight isolates of the genus Trichosporon maintained in the Culture Collection Micoteca URM. The ITS and IGS1 regions were sequenced for taxonomic confirmation. Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM) was performed at the Strategic Center for Northeast Technologies (CETENE). The scanning electron microscope was equipped with an Energy Dispersion Spectrometer (EDS). The Trichosporon isolates were identified as Trichosporon asahii (6) and Trichosporon montevideense (2) by internal transcript spacer (ITS) region and intergenic spacer 1 region (IGS1) sequencing. All eight strains were used to induce the in vitro hair infection, and nodules formed after the incubation period. Temperature variations and high humidity were not observed to be related to the development of this hair disease. The main chemical constituents detected in the nodules were carbon, nitrogen and oxygen, as well as a low level of sulfur. The absence of calcium, combined with the low level of sulfur, might explain the soft nature of the white piedra nodules. This study demonstrated that several Trichosporon species may be responsible for causing white piedra.


Subject(s)
Hair Diseases/microbiology , Microscopy, Electron, Scanning , Piedra/diagnosis , Piedra/microbiology , Calcium/chemistry , Hair/ultrastructure , Humans , Nitrogen/chemistry , Oxygen/chemistry , Sulfur/chemistry , Trichosporon
13.
Dermatol. argent ; 22(1)2016. ilus
Article in Spanish | LILACS | ID: biblio-859131

ABSTRACT

La verrugosis generalizada es un rasgo común a diferentes síndromes de inmunodeficiencia, cuyo prototipo es la epidermodisplasia verruciforme (EV). Se presenta una paciente con síndrome WILD (Warts, Immunodeficiency, Lymphoedema, anogenital Dysplasia), que consultó por verrugas profusas, con displasia genital y linfedema. La presencia de DNA para los papilomavirus de los grupos I y II se reveló con hibridización molecular por captura híbrida en microplaca para detección del DNA de HPV de lesiones de cuello uterino. La inmunofenotipificación en sangre periférica demostró población linfoide con moderado aumento de poblaciones NK y TNK, sin evidencia inmunofenotípica de población B clonal. Las verrugas planas mejoraron con retinoides sistémicos e imiquimod tópico. La displasia genital desapareció luego de la vacunación para HPV con vacuna cuadrivalente (AU)


Generalized verrucosis is a common characteristic of several immunodeficiency disorders whose prototype is the epidermodysplasia verruciformis. We report a patient with WILD SYNDROME (Warts, Immunodeficiency, Lymphoedema and anogenital Dysplasia) who consulted for profuse warts, genital dysplasia and limphoedema. The presence of DNA from papillomavirus groups I and II was revealed by molecular hybridization with hybrid capture in microplate for HPV DNA detection of uterine cervical lesions. Immunophenotyping in peripheral blood showed lymphoid population with moderate increase in NK and TNK populations without immunophenotypic evidence of clonal B population. Flat warts improved with systemic retinoids and topical imiquimod. The genital dysplasia disappeared after vaccination with quadrivalent HPV vaccine (AU)


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Adult , Piedra/diagnosis , Trichosporon , Axilla/microbiology , Infections
15.
Mycopathologia ; 178(1-2): 85-9, 2014 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24952012

ABSTRACT

We report four cases of scalp white piedra (SWP) in Brazilian female children. Morphological and physiological approaches gave inconsistent results for identifying Trichosporon to species level, while the sequencing of the intergenic spacer 1 region of ribosomal DNA accurately identified the agent of SWP as T. inkin. These cases emphasize the occurrence of this species causing this type of infection. The molecular identification of the suspected agent is needed for appropriate epidemiological surveillance of superficial mycoses caused by Trichosporon species.


Subject(s)
Piedra/diagnosis , Piedra/microbiology , Scalp/microbiology , Trichosporon/isolation & purification , Trichosporonosis/diagnosis , Trichosporonosis/microbiology , Brazil , Child , DNA, Fungal/chemistry , DNA, Fungal/genetics , DNA, Ribosomal Spacer/chemistry , DNA, Ribosomal Spacer/genetics , Female , Humans , Molecular Sequence Data , Piedra/pathology , Scalp/pathology , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Trichosporonosis/pathology
16.
Infectio ; 17(2): 106-110, ene.-jun. 2013. ilus, tab
Article in Spanish | LILACS, COLNAL | ID: lil-702377

ABSTRACT

Las piedras son infecciones fúngicas superficiales y asintomáticas frecuentes en los países tropicales, que se caracterizan por la presencia de nódulos a lo largo del tallo piloso. Sin embargo, la literatura publicada durante los últimos años es limitada y la taxonomía actual de sus agentes etiológicos es poco conocida. Se presenta un caso de piedra negra y otro de piedra blanca en dos mujeres colombianas inmunocompetentes con numerosas lesiones nodulares en su cabello que consultaron a un centro de referencia nacional en Bogotá, Colombia. A pesar de que las piedras fueron descritas y clasificadas desde el punto de vista clínico y microbiológico hace más de 100 años, aún se conoce poco sobre su historia, ecología, forma de transmisión, epidemiología y presentación clínica. Sin embargo, las diferencias que existen entre las dos micosis ayudan a orientar el diagnóstico clínico y fúngico.


Black piedra and white piedra are common superficial and asymptomatic fungal infections in tropical countries, characterized by the presence of hard nodules located along the hair shaft. However, in recent years literature on this topic has been limited and the current taxonomy of their etiologic agents is poorly understood. Here we report two cases of black piedra and white piedra in two immune competent Colombian women with numerous nodular lesions in their hair who visited a national reference center in Bogota, Colombia. Despite having been described and classified from a clinical and microbiological perspective more than 100 years ago, little is still known about the history, ecology, mode of transmission, epidemiology and clinical presentation of piedras. Nevertheless, the differences between the two mycoses help to orient clinical and fungal diagnoses.


Subject(s)
Humans , Female , Adolescent , Aged , Piedra , Scalp , Trichosporon , Infections , Mycoses
17.
Braz. j. microbiol ; Braz. j. microbiol;43(4): 1347-1354, Oct.-Dec. 2012. ilus, graf, tab
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-665819

ABSTRACT

Piedra, is an asymptomatic fungal infection of the hair shaft, resulting in the formation of nodules of different hardness on the infected hair. The infection also known as Trichomycosis nodularis is a superficial fungal infection arising from the pathogen being restricted to the stratum corneum with little or no tissue reaction. The nodules are a concretion of hyphae and fruiting bodies of the fungus. Two varieties of Piedra may be seen, Black Piedra and White Piedra. The fungus Trichosporon ovoides is involved in the occurrence of both types of Piedras. The purpose of this study was to examine the effectiveness of selected essential oils for the control of growth of the fungus and to determine whether the antifungal effect was due to the major compounds of the oils. Two screening methods viz. Agar well diffusion assay and Minimum Inhibitory Concentration were adopted for the study. MIC and MFC were determined by tube dilution method. Essential oils from Eucalyptus, Ocimum basilicum, Mentha piperita, Cymbopogon flexuosus, Cymbopogon winterians, Trachyspermum ammi, Zingiber officinalis, Citrus limon, Cinnamomon zeylanicum, Salvia sclarea, Citrus aurantifolia, Melaleuca alternifolia, Citrus aurantium, Citrus bergamia, Pogostemon pathchouli, Cedrus atlantica, Jasminum officinale, Juniperus communis, Abelmoschus moschatus, Cyperus scariosus, Palargonium graveolens, Boswellia carterii, Rosa damascene, Veteveria zizanoides and Commiphora myrrha were evaluated. The essential oils of Cymbopogon winterians, Mentha piperita, Cinnamomum zeylanicum, Melaleuca alternifolia and Eucalyptus globulus were proved to be most effective against the fungus Trichosporon ovoides.


Subject(s)
Humans , Anti-Infective Agents , Mycoses , Oils, Volatile/analysis , Piedra , Trichosporon/growth & development , Methods , Virulence
18.
Braz. J. Microbiol. ; 43(4): 1347-1354, Oct.-Dec. 2012. ilus, graf, tab
Article in English | VETINDEX | ID: vti-2145

ABSTRACT

Piedra, is an asymptomatic fungal infection of the hair shaft, resulting in the formation of nodules of different hardness on the infected hair. The infection also known as Trichomycosis nodularis is a superficial fungal infection arising from the pathogen being restricted to the stratum corneum with little or no tissue reaction. The nodules are a concretion of hyphae and fruiting bodies of the fungus. Two varieties of Piedra may be seen, Black Piedra and White Piedra. The fungus Trichosporon ovoides is involved in the occurrence of both types of Piedras. The purpose of this study was to examine the effectiveness of selected essential oils for the control of growth of the fungus and to determine whether the antifungal effect was due to the major compounds of the oils. Two screening methods viz. Agar well diffusion assay and Minimum Inhibitory Concentration were adopted for the study. MIC and MFC were determined by tube dilution method. Essential oils from Eucalyptus, Ocimum basilicum, Mentha piperita, Cymbopogon flexuosus, Cymbopogon winterians, Trachyspermum ammi, Zingiber officinalis, Citrus limon, Cinnamomon zeylanicum, Salvia sclarea, Citrus aurantifolia, Melaleuca alternifolia, Citrus aurantium, Citrus bergamia, Pogostemon pathchouli, Cedrus atlantica, Jasminum officinale, Juniperus communis, Abelmoschus moschatus, Cyperus scariosus, Palargonium graveolens, Boswellia carterii, Rosa damascene, Veteveria zizanoides and Commiphora myrrha were evaluated. The essential oils of Cymbopogon winterians, Mentha piperita, Cinnamomum zeylanicum, Melaleuca alternifolia and Eucalyptus globulus were proved to be most effective against the fungus Trichosporon ovoides.(AU)


Subject(s)
Oils, Volatile/analysis , Antifungal Agents/chemistry , Piedra/diagnosis
19.
An Bras Dermatol ; 87(5): 786-7, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23044579

ABSTRACT

White piedra is a superficial mycosis caused by the genus Trichosporon. It is characterized by nodules on the hair shaft. Pediculosis capitis is caused by Pediculus humanus var. capitis of the suborder Anoplura. Whereas pediculosis is a common infestation, clinical reports of white piedra are rare. Molecular biology procedures identified T. inkin as the agent of white piedra in this case report. The authors present associations between the two diseases in the same patient in order to highlight their clinical differences.


Subject(s)
Lice Infestations/complications , Piedra/complications , Female , Humans , Young Adult
20.
An. bras. dermatol ; An. bras. dermatol;87(5): 786-787, Sept-Oct. 2012. ilus
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-651579

ABSTRACT

White piedra is a superficial mycosis caused by the genus Trichosporon. It is characterized by nodules on the hair shaft. Pediculosis capitis is caused by Pediculus humanus var. capitis of the suborder Anoplura. Whereas pediculosis is a common infestation, clinical reports of white piedra are rare. Molecular biology procedures identified T. inkin as the agent of white piedra in this case report. The authors present associations between the two diseases in the same patient in order to highlight their clinical differences.


Piedra branca é micose superficial causada pelo gênero Trichosporon e caracterizada por nódulos aderidos à haste do pelo. Pediculose capitis é causada pelo Pediculus humanus var. capitis pertencente à subordem Anoplura. Enquanto que a pediculose é enfermidade comum, relatos clínicos de piedra branca são raros. Técnicas de biologia molecular identificaram o agente de piedra branca do presente relato como T.inkin. Os autores apresentam associação de ambas as infestações no mesmo paciente para salientar seus aspectos clínicos distintos.


Subject(s)
Female , Humans , Young Adult , Lice Infestations/complications , Piedra/complications
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