Athlete's foot pathophysiology

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [2] Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Sanjana Nethagani, M.B.B.S.[3]

Overview

  • It is typically transmitted in moist environments where people walk barefoot, such as showers, bath houses, and locker rooms.[2][3][1]
  • It can also be transmitted by sharing footwear with an infected person, or less commonly, by sharing towels with an infected person.

Pathophysiology

Transmission

  • The various parasitic fungi that cause athlete's foot can also cause skin infections on other areas of the body, most often under toenails (onychomycosis) or on the groin (tinea cruris).
  • It is transmitted even by sharing footwear.

Pathology

Histopathology of Tinea pedis

Scrapings of skin affected with tinea pedis prepared with KOH show the following features.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Causes of athlete's foot, at WebMD
  2. "Athlete's foot". Mayo Clinic Health Center.
  3. [1]
    • Risk factors for athlete's foot, atWebMD
  4. Hiruma J, Ogawa Y, Hiruma M (2015). "Trichophyton tonsurans infection in Japan: epidemiology, clinical features, diagnosis and infection control". J Dermatol. 42 (3): 245–9. doi:10.1111/1346-8138.12678. PMID 25736317.
  5. Sharifzadeh A, Shokri H, Khosravi AR (2016). "In vitro evaluation of antifungal susceptibility and keratinase, elastase, lipase and DNase activities of different dermatophyte species isolated from clinical specimens in Iran". Mycoses. 59 (11): 710–719. doi:10.1111/myc.12521. PMID 27291045.
  6. Weitzman I, Summerbell RC (1995). "The dermatophytes". Clin Microbiol Rev. 8 (2): 240–59. PMC 172857. PMID 7621400.
  7. Dahl MV, Grando SA (1994). "Chronic dermatophytosis: what is special about Trichophyton rubrum?". Adv Dermatol. 9: 97–109, discussion 110-1. PMID 8060745.
  8. King RD, Khan HA, Foye JC, Greenberg JH, Jones HE (1975). "Transferrin, iron, and dermatophytes. I. Serum dematophyte inhibitory component definitively identified as unsaturated transferrin". J Lab Clin Med. 86 (2): 204–12. PMID 1151148.
  9. Dai Y, Xia X, Shen H (2019). "Multiple abscesses in the lower extremities caused by Trichophyton rubrum". BMC Infect Dis. 19 (1): 271. doi:10.1186/s12879-019-3897-3. PMC 6425592. PMID 30894136.


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