21 results on '"Gennaro Franco"'
Search Results
2. Erythema nodosum induced by kerion celsi of the scalp in a woman
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Aldo, Morrone, Roberta, Calcaterra, Mariacarla, Valenzano, Raffaella, Fazio, and Gennaro, Franco
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- 2011
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3. Skin cancer risk assessment in dark skinned immigrants: the role of social determinants and ethnicity
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Valeska Padovese, Mariacarla Valenzano, Gennaro Franco, Marina Cammilli, Laura Pecoraro, and Alessio Petrelli
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Cultural Studies ,Adult ,Male ,Asia ,Skin Neoplasms ,genetic structures ,Adolescent ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Immigration ,Ethnic group ,Emigrants and Immigrants ,Risk Assessment ,030207 dermatology & venereal diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,medicine ,Ethnicity ,Humans ,Social determinants of health ,Sociology ,Socioeconomics ,Poverty ,media_common ,integumentary system ,Melanoma ,Advanced stage ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,medicine.disease ,Lower incidence ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Italy ,Socioeconomic Factors ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Africa ,Female ,Skin cancer ,Risk assessment ,Demography - Abstract
Dark-skinned people have a lower incidence rate of skin cancer, in particular melanoma, which is detected at more advanced stages leading to poorer prognoses and long-term outcomes compared to whites. The gap in survival is due to some difficulty in melanoma detection, lack of attention from doctors and awareness by patients. This study aims to assess skin cancer risk awareness in dark-skinned immigrants and to determine the influence of socioeconomic factors and ethnic origin on behaviors.This is a cross-sectional health facility based study carried out in a 12-month period. A semi-structured questionnaire to assess skin cancer risk awareness and a dermatological examination was offered to dark-skinned immigrants consecutively attending the dermatology department of the National Institute for Health, Migration and Poverty in Rome.147 dark-skinned immigrants were enrolled, of which 54.4% were males, coming from Africa (53.1%). They were mainly young, aged 18-34 (56.5%). The level of education and length of stay in Italy was significantly related to the awareness about skin cancer: people with a high educational level (OR: 8.1 95% CI: 3.2-23.4) or immigrated more than 4 years before the interview (OR: 2.1 95% CI: 1.0-4.4) have a greater knowledge about skin cancer.Education level is the strongest predictive factor of skin cancer awareness, whereas cultural behaviours and personal experience of sunburns are the main factors determining sunlight avoidance. Health promotion programs targeting immigrants must consider cultural differences related to ethnicity and country of origin, and adopt a transcultural approach.
- Published
- 2017
4. Epidemiology of Skin Disorders in Ethiopian Children and Adolescents: An Analysis of Records from the Italian Dermatological Centre, Mekelle, Tigray, Ethiopia, 2005 to 2009
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Gennaro Franco, Pascal Vignally, Elisa Maiani, Daniele Didero, Concetta Mirisola, Federica Dassoni, Annalisa Rosso, Rosalia Marrone, Maria Chiara Pajno, Aldo Morrone, Emma Pizzini, and Roberta Calcaterra
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medicine.medical_specialty ,education.field_of_study ,Pediatrics ,business.industry ,Medical record ,Population ,Retrospective cohort study ,Dermatology ,Skill development ,medicine.disease ,Clinical Practice ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Epidemiology ,Retrospective analysis ,medicine ,business ,education ,Contact dermatitis - Abstract
Skin disorders are an important problem in children living in developing countries, but only a few epidemiologic investigations on pediatric dermatoses are available in the literature. Our study is an analysis of the range and frequency of skin diseases presenting to the Italian Dermatological Center in a pediatric Ethiopian population. A retrospective analysis was performed on 17,967 medical records of children aged 0 to 18 years attending the Italian Dermatological Centre in Mekele (Ethiopia) from January 2005 to December 2009. Infections and infestations accounted for 47% of the disorders seen; fungal infections were the most common (44.1%), followed by bacterial and parasitic diseases. Dermatitis constituted the second most common diagnostic category (24.7%) of the disorders seen, and contact dermatitis was the most common diagnosis (48.8%). Pigmentary disorders and disorders of skin appendages were more common in girls, whereas fungal and parasitic infections were more common in boys. Bacterial and parasitic infections were more common in children younger than 1 year old, fungal infections in those aged 1 to 5.9, and disorders of skin appendages and pigmentary disorders in those aged 15 to 18. These findings demonstrate that most of the disorders seen could be easily managed in clinical practice with appropriate skill development. It is crucial to ensure that training of medical students and pediatricians focuses on accurate recognition, diagnosis, and management of these common skin diseases and that families, teachers, health workers, and nurses be educated about the most common signs of prevalent skin diseases to help facilitate appropriate care.
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- 2012
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5. Clinical features of acne vulgaris in 444 patients with ethnic skin
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Gennaro Franco, Mariacarla Valenzano, Elisa Maiani, Aldo Morrone, Emma Pizzini, Roberta Calcaterra, and Raffaella Fazio
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,medicine ,Ethnic group ,Dermatology ,General Medicine ,business ,medicine.disease ,Acne - Published
- 2010
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6. Skin diseases highlighting essential global public health priorities
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Aldo Morrone, Luigi Toma, and Gennaro Franco
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Gerontology ,Economic growth ,medicine.medical_specialty ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Refugee ,Rome ,Immigration ,Population ,Dermatology ,Global Health ,Skin Diseases ,medicine ,Humans ,Sanitation ,education ,Developing Countries ,Poverty ,media_common ,Preventive healthcare ,education.field_of_study ,Health Priorities ,business.industry ,Public health ,Academies and Institutes ,International Agencies ,Emigration and Immigration ,Disadvantaged ,Sociology, Medical ,business ,Tourism - Abstract
Which are the essential global public health activities that should be carried out in order to attain the largest impact on poverty reduction and health improvement in the world? Since its foundation in 2001 the Human Mobile Population Committee (HMPC) has continued to devote its efforts to finding answers to this question, with a particular focus on the skin diseases of the Human Mobile Population (HMP) and other groups of disadvantaged people. In this article we present the model of socio-sanitary activity in the field of Migration, Poverty and Health of the Department of Preventive Medicine of Migration, Tourism and Tropical Dermatology (Dept.) at San Gallicano Institute – Research Institute for Hospitalization and Treatment (IRCCS) – in Rome (Italy). The activities of this dermatological centre are in the spirit of the HMPC's aims and we are of the opinion that this model is not only ethically valid, but also practically and economically convenient, and that there is evidence that our experience is worth repeating, in as many situations as possible, in the interest of public health.
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- 2005
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7. A case of loiasis in Rome
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Aldo Morrone, OB Tchangmena, M Marangi, Luigi Toma, and Gennaro Franco
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Adult ,Male ,Veterinary medicine ,Anti-Inflammatory Agents ,Dermatology ,Albendazole ,Betamethasone ,Filariasis ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Loiasis ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Humans ,Immigrant population ,Anthelmintics ,biology ,business.industry ,Serum samples ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Infectious Diseases ,Italy ,Skin lesion ,business ,Loa loa ,Demography - Abstract
Background Owing to the increase of an immigrant population and of Italian citizens travelling for tourism or on business, it is nowadays possible to observe clinical pictures characteristic of tropical regions, often with indistinct symptoms. One of these is Loa loa infestation, or loiasis, a form of filariasis caused by Loa loa and transmitted by the Chrysops fly. We present the case of a male immigrant from Cameroon. Characteristic symptoms were intense xerosis, mostly of the third inferior part of the legs, intensely pruritic, with numerous lesions from scratching. No benefit was obtained by emollient topics, anti-acarus and systemic antihistamines. Method Serum samples and Giemsa, haematoxylin, haematoxylin + Giemsa concentration-on-membrane stains, have evidenced the presence of Loa loa microfilariae. Results A diagnosis for L. loa (loiasis) infestation was made. Conclusions At the beginning of the migration phenomenon, particularly from Africa, Italian physicians, especially dermatologists, were eagerly looking for ‘tropical’ diseases; this approach can be defined as ‘Salgari's syndrome’ from the name of the Italian novelist who, though never travelling out of Italy, had perfectly described environments and habits typical of far away countries. Now, conversely, we have to avoid the opposite approach of considering real tropical diseases as related to social or psychological difficult conditions.
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- 2002
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8. Topical tacrolimus treatment for localized pretibial bullous phemphigoid
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A. Mussi, Aldo Morrone, M. Carducci, Roberta Calcaterra, and Gennaro Franco
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Pemphigoid ,Infectious Diseases ,business.industry ,medicine ,MEDLINE ,Dermatology ,Topical tacrolimus ,business ,medicine.disease ,Surgery - Published
- 2009
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9. Acute pancreatitis as initial manifestation of systemic lupus erythematosus and subacute cutaneous lupus erythematosus: report of two cases
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Aldo Morrone, Roberta Calcaterra, M. Carducci, A Mussi, and Gennaro Franco
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Subacute cutaneous lupus erythematosus ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Rheumatology ,business.industry ,medicine ,Acute pancreatitis ,medicine.disease ,business ,Dermatology ,Anti-SSA/Ro autoantibodies - Published
- 2008
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10. Nail Involvement in Pemphigus Vulgaris
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Gennaro Franco, M. Carducci, Aldo Morrone, A. Mussi, Roberta Calcaterra, and Claudio Bonifati
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,business.industry ,Pemphigus vulgaris ,Immunologic Tests ,MEDLINE ,Nail (anatomy) ,Medicine ,Dermatology ,General Medicine ,business ,medicine.disease - Published
- 2008
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11. Cupping-related skin lesions
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Gennaro, Franco, Roberta, Calcaterra, Mariacarla, Valenzano, Valeska, Padovese, Raffaella, Fazio, and Aldo, Morrone
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Wound Healing ,Hot Temperature ,Erythema ,Hyperpigmentation ,Humans ,History, 19th Century ,Medicine, Traditional ,Skin Diseases ,History, Ancient - Abstract
In the outpatient department of the National Institute for Health, Migration and Poverty (NIHMP) in Rome, Italy, and at the Italian Dermatological Hospital in Mekele, Ethiopia, from January 1, 2007, to December 31, 2009, 47 patients, adults, and children showing typical circular skin lesions referable to cupping were observed. The patients (32 men and 15 women) underwent complete dermatological examination, and their case histories were collected with the aid of a cultural mediator from the same linguistic or cultural area of the patient. The clinical picture included blue-red, circular erythematous spots, sometimes covered with crusts, consistent with recent cupping (figure 1 and figure 2). In some cases, particularly in older lesions, atrophic-cicatricial lesions and irregular, normal-color, slate gray, or hypochromic skin surface were observed (figure 3). Lesions were observed on the back, on the presternal region (figure 4), and, in case of pathologies causing abdominal swelling (i.e., kwashiorkor, intestinal parasitosis), on the abdomen (figure 5). The clinical pictures initially diagnosed as dermatophytoses or lesions caused by traumas or violence were later proved to be cupping-related outcomes or complications.
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- 2012
12. Clinical features of acne vulgaris in 444 patients with ethnic skin
- Author
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Aldo, Morrone, Gennaro, Franco, Mariacarla, Valenzano, Raffaella, Fazio, Elisa, Maiani, Emma, Pizzini, and Roberta, Calcaterra
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Adult ,Male ,Asia ,Adolescent ,Skin Pigmentation ,South America ,Middle East ,Young Adult ,Italy ,Hyperpigmentation ,Acne Vulgaris ,Africa ,Ethnicity ,Humans ,Female - Published
- 2011
13. Female Genital Mutilation and Risk for Transmission of STIs
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Roberta Calcaterra, Aldo Morrone, and Gennaro Franco
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Clitoridectomy ,Female circumcision ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Obstetrics ,business.industry ,Transmission (medicine) ,Labia ,Clitoris ,Adult women ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Pelvic inflammatory disease ,medicine ,Infibulation ,business - Abstract
Female genital mutilation (FGM) is a traditional cultural practice, but also a form of violence against girls, which affects their lives as adult women. FGM comprises a wide range of procedures: the excision of the prepuce; the partial or total excision of the clitoris (clitoridectomy) and labia; or the stitching and narrowing of the vaginal orifice (infibulation). The number of girls and women who have been subjected to FGM is estimated at around 137 million worldwide and 3 million girls per year are considered at risk. Most of the females who have undergone mutilation live in 28 African countries.
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- 2011
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14. Clinical features and treatment of dermatosis papulosa nigra in migrants to Italy
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Roberta, Calcaterra, Gennaro, Franco, Mariacarla, Valenzano, Raffaella, Fazio, and Aldo, Morrone
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Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,Racial Groups ,Emigrants and Immigrants ,Skin Pigmentation ,Middle Aged ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Young Adult ,Italy ,Patient Education as Topic ,Risk Factors ,Humans ,Female ,Prospective Studies ,Child ,Facial Dermatoses ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Dermatosis papulosa nigra (DPN) is a benign epithelial tumor that is common in dark-skinned people. Although the diagnosis is easily made on medical examination, DPN is characterized by a chronic and worsening course. Therefore, even if DPN is a benign disease, the lesions are unaesthetic and the therapeutic options are quite inefficient. A prospective study was carried out during a period of 24 months (January 2006 to December 2007) at the Department for Preventive Medicine for Migration, Tourism and Tropical Dermatology of San Gallicano Dermatological Institute in Rome. Among 58 patients, 41 (71%) were women and 17 (29%) were men. The mean age was 33.5 years (range, 8-45 years). One pediatric patient was observed. This study is the first in Italy that, in recent years, has observed an important growth of the migration. The classic female predominance, family predisposition, and photodistribution of the lesion were found. DPN is frequently associated with patient discomfort, therefore the education of patients to reduce self-treatment is important.
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- 2010
15. Podoconiosis: an experience from Tigray, Northern Ethiopia
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Aldo Morrone, Elisa Maiani, Rosalia Marrone, Valeska Padovese, Roberta Calcaterra, Lorenzo Manni, Gennaro Franco, Federica Dassoni, Gebre Ab Barnabas, and Maria Chiara Pajno
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Dermatology ,Severity of Illness Index ,Cohort Studies ,Foot Diseases ,Soil ,Young Adult ,Risk Factors ,Environmental health ,medicine ,Humans ,Podoconiosis ,Elephantiasis ,Developing Countries ,business.industry ,Incidence ,Environmental Exposure ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Agricultural Workers' Diseases ,Causality ,Epidemiological Monitoring ,Disease Progression ,Female ,Ethiopia ,business ,Environmental Monitoring - Published
- 2010
16. Paraneoplastic Raynaud Phenomenon With Digital Necrosis Associated With Hyperhomocysteinemia and Antiphospholipid Antibodies
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Roberta Calcaterra, Aldo Morrone, M. Carducci, Letizia Perracchio, Massimo Lopez, G. Viola, M. Rinaldi, Irene Venturo, Gennaro Franco, and A. Mussi
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Hyperhomocysteinemia ,Necrosis ,biology ,business.industry ,Dermatology ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Raynaud phenomenon ,medicine ,biology.protein ,RAYNAUD DISEASE ,Antibody ,medicine.symptom ,business - Published
- 2007
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17. Juxta-clavicular beaded lines
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Luca Muscardin, Aldo Morrone, Pietro Donati, Antonio Maini, and Gennaro Franco
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Adult ,Male ,Hyperplasia ,integumentary system ,business.industry ,Juxta ,Black People ,Sebaceous hyperplasia ,Dermatology ,Anatomy ,medicine.disease ,Clavicle ,Skin Diseases ,White People ,Sebaceous Glands ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,medicine ,Humans ,Female ,business ,Neck - Abstract
We present a case series of 63 patients diagnosed with juxta-clavicular beaded lines. This condition is more frequent in dark-skinned people and corresponds to an anatomical variant of simple sebaceous hyperplasia. In view of the strong reactivity of the melanocytes in dark-skinned people, and of the possible hypochromic results, no treatment is advised.
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- 2006
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18. Erythema nodosum induced by kerion celsi of the scalp in a woman
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Aldo, Morrone, primary, Roberta, Calcaterra, additional, Mariacarla, Valenzano, additional, Raffaella, Fazio, additional, and Gennaro, Franco, additional
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- 2010
- Full Text
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19. Vulvar lymphangiectases on female genital mutilation mimicking genital warts
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Luigi Toma, Luca Muscardin, Gennaro Franco, Aldo Morrone, and Lorenzo Nosotti
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Female circumcision ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Infectious Diseases ,Lymphangiectases ,business.industry ,medicine ,Dermatology ,medicine.disease ,business ,Genital warts - Published
- 2006
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20. Ulcers of the face and neck in a woman with pulmonary tuberculosis: presentation of a clinical case
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Federica Dassoni, Aldo Morrone, Maria Chiara Pajno, Roberta Calcaterra, Rosalia Marrone, Elisa Maiani, and Gennaro Franco
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Emergency Medical Services ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Health (social science) ,Tuberculosis ,Antitubercular Agents ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Physical examination ,Pharmacotherapy ,Health care ,Biopsy ,Skin Ulcer ,medicine ,Humans ,Medical history ,Tuberculosis, Cutaneous ,Tuberculosis, Pulmonary ,Aged ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Public health ,General surgery ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Skin ulcer ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Female ,Ethiopia ,Rural Health Services ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Neck - Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Tuberculosis (TB), which is endemic in developing countries, is an important public health problem. Cutaneous TB (CT) represents 1.5% of all TB cases and is considered to be a re-emerging pathology in developing countries due to co-infections with HIV, multidrug-resistant TB, a shortage of health facilities with appropriate diagnostic equipment, reduced access to treatment, and poor treatment compliance among patients who often resort to traditional medicine. CASE REPORT: This report describes the case of a 70 year-old woman who attended the outpatients department of the Italian Dermatological Centre (IDC) in Mekelle, the capital city of Tigray (Northern Ethiopia), complaining of the appearance of two ulcers on her face and neck. The patient had a history of pulmonary TB, with her initial systemic treatment ceased after 1 month. Cytological examination of a needle aspiration from the neck lesion showed a non-specific bacterial superinfection. No acid-fast bacilli were found on Ziehl-Nielsen staining. On the basis of clinical suspicion of CT, it was decided to avoid biopsy for histology and culture and to immediately start anti-tubercular treatment. A significant improvement of the cutaneous lesions was noted after approximately 40 days. CONCLUSION: Currently, the diagnosis of CT is based on careful clinical and histopathological correlation. The standard diagnostic approach is to biopsy for Ziehl-Nielsen stain, culture and histology. However, in rural areas of DC where diagnostic methods may not be available and advanced stages of disease such as CT are likely to be encountered, after the use of the most effective diagnostic tests available, empirical treatment on the basis of medical history and physical examination is suggested. Appropriate training of healthcare workers and public health education programs encouraging early presentation and improved patient treatment compliance are additional important preventative strategies.
21. Erythema nodosum induced by kerion celsi of the scalp in a woman.
- Author
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Morrone A, Calcaterra R, Valenzano M, Fazio R, and Franco G
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- Adult, Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal administration & dosage, Antifungal Agents administration & dosage, Erythema Nodosum microbiology, Female, Histocytochemistry, Humans, Microscopy, Naphthalenes administration & dosage, Naproxen administration & dosage, Terbinafine, Tinea Capitis microbiology, Treatment Outcome, Erythema Nodosum diagnosis, Erythema Nodosum pathology, Scalp microbiology, Scalp pathology, Tinea Capitis complications, Tinea Capitis pathology, Trichophyton isolation & purification
- Abstract
A 35-year-old woman, with a 3-week history of an enlarging erythematous, scaly plaque of the scalp vertex associated with the onset of some painful, subcutaneous nodules on her pretibial regions. Trichophyton mentagrophytes was isolated from the scalp lesion and the histological examination of one of the nodular lesions of the legs showed a septal panniculitis. The diagnosis of erythema nodosum (EN) induced by kerion celsi was made and the patient started therapy with oral terbinafine 250 mg per day for 4 weeks associated with naproxene per os 1 g per day for 2 weeks. Erythema nodosum is considered a reaction pattern to a wide variety of microbial and non-microbial stimuli: dermatophytic infections are rarely associated with EN., (© 2010 Blackwell Verlag GmbH.)
- Published
- 2011
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