White piedra
White piedra | |
ICD-10 | B36.2 |
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ICD-9 | 111.2 |
DiseasesDB | 31871 |
MeSH | D010854 |
Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Kiran Singh, M.D. [2]
Overview
White piedra (or tinea blanca) is a mycosis of the hair associated with Trichosporon beigelii and is characterized by nodules composed of hyphae that encompass hair shaft .
Differential Diagnosis
White piedra should be differentiated from other diseases presenting as red, pruritic, annular, scaly rash. The differentials include the following:
Name of superficial infection | Clinical presentation | Extension to hair follicle | Fungus(i) | Systemic disease | KOH preparations | Morphology in tissue sections |
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Tinea or ringworm | Round lesions with scaly border, accompanied by pruritis and burning | Yes; when suppurative known as kerion, when chronic known as Majocchi's granuloma | Dermatophytes (Epidermophyton spp., Trichophyton spp., Microsporum spp.) | Very rare but can invade the dermis and soft tissues, causing mycetomas | Hyphae with or without septations | Hyphae cannot be visualized in the keratin with H&E, special stains are needed |
Tinea versicolor | Hypo and hyperpigmentation in patients with oily and sweaty skin, fine scales when scratching | Yes, known as Pityrosporum folliculits | Malassezia spp. | Systemic infections may occur in premature neonates receiving parenteral nutrition and in other immunosuppressed hosts | Yeasts and hyphae (“spaghetti and meat balls”) | Faintly basophilic hyphae in the stratum corneum |
Tinea nigra | Brown to black macule, usually on palms, with some scaling | No | Phaeoannellomyces werneckii | Not described | Darkly pigmented, septated, and branching hyphae | Pigmented hyphae in the stratum corneum |
White piedra | Creamy-white, small, soft nodules in hair shafts | No | Trichosporon spp. | Immunosuppressed patients may have lung infiltrates, renal involvement, and fungemia | Septate hyphae perpendicular to hair shaft | Not used for diagnosis |
Black piedra | Hard dark nodules in hair shafts | No | Piedraia hortae | Not described | Collections of crescent ascospores surrounded by pigmented hyphae | Not used for diagnosis |
Superficial candidiasis | Intertrigo, chronic paronychia, onychodystrophy, cheilitis | Yes | Candida spp. | Yes, particularly in patients with AIDS and depending on the level of immunosuppression | Yeasts, pseudohyphae may be observed | Fungal elements may be seen through the biopsy, vascular invasion must be determined |
Differential diagnoses of annular skin lesions
Disease | Clinical presentation | Treatment |
---|---|---|
Tinea corporis | Scaly, annular, erythematous plaques or papules on glabrous skin | Topical and systemic antifungals |
Pityriasis rosea | Small, fawn-colored, oval patches with fine scales along the borders, following skin cleavage lines | Topical and systemic corticosteroids; UVA, UVB |
Granuloma annulare | Indurated, nonscaly, skin-colored annular plaques and papules, usually on the extremities | Topical and intralesional corticosteroids |
Sarcoidosis | Indurated, erythematous plaques | Topical, intralesional and systemic corticosteroids; antimalarials; thalidomide |
Hansen's disease | Erythematous annular plaques, with or without scale | Dapsone; rifampin (Rifadin) |
Urticaria | Evanescent annular, nonscaly, erythematous plaques | Oral antihistamines |
Subacute cutaneous lupus erythematosus | Annular or papulosquamous plaques, with or without scales, on sun-exposed areas | Topical, intralesional and systemic corticosteroids; antimalarials |
Erythema annulare centrifugum | Annular patches with trailing scales inside erythematous borders | Topical and systemic corticosteroids; oral antihistamines; treatment of the underlying cause |
Physical Examination
Hair
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Piedra-white. With permission from Dermatology Atlas.[1]
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Piedra-white. With permission from Dermatology Atlas.[1]
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Piedra-white. With permission from Dermatology Atlas.[1]
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Piedra-white. With permission from Dermatology Atlas.[1]
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Piedra-white. With permission from Dermatology Atlas.[1]
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Piedra-white. With permission from Dermatology Atlas.[1]
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Piedra-white. With permission from Dermatology Atlas.[1]
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Piedra-white. With permission from Dermatology Atlas.[1]
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Piedra-white. With permission from Dermatology Atlas.[1]
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Piedra-white. With permission from Dermatology Atlas.[1]
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Piedra-white. With permission from Dermatology Atlas.[1]
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Piedra-white. With permission from Dermatology Atlas.[1]
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Piedra-white. With permission from Dermatology Atlas.[1]
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Piedra-white. With permission from Dermatology Atlas.[1]
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Piedra-white. With permission from Dermatology Atlas.[1]
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Piedra-white. With permission from Dermatology Atlas.[1]
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Piedra-white. With permission from Dermatology Atlas.[1]
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Piedra-white. With permission from Dermatology Atlas.[1]