- cutaneous dermatophyte infection occurring in sites other than the feet, groin, face, or hand
- begins as a pruritic, circular or oval, erythematous, scaling patch or plaque that spreads centrifugally.
- Central clearing follows, while an active, advancing, raised border remains
Treatment
- usually responds well to topical antifungal drugs, such as azoles, allylamines, butenafine, ciclopirox, and tolnaftate
- Topical antifungal treatment is generally administered once or twice per day for one to three weeks
- Clotrimazole cream (twice daily)
- Clotrimazole/Miconazole cream (twice daily)
- Ketoconazole (once per day/shampoo is usually one use)
- Systemic treatment is an alternative for patients with extensive skin involvement and patients who fail topical therapy
- Adults
- Terbinafine 250 mg per day for one week
- Itraconazole 200 mg per day for one week
- Fluconazole 150 to 200 mg once weekly for two to four weeks
- Griseofulvin microsize 500 to 1000 mg per day or griseofulvin ultramicrosize 375 to 500 mg per day for two to four weeks
- Children
- Itraconazole 3 to 5 mg/kg per day (up to 200 mg per day)
- Fluconazole 6 mg/kg once weekly
- Griseofulvin microsize 10 to 20 mg/kg per day or griseofulvin ultramicrosize 5 to 15 mg/kg per day
Reference:
www.uptodate.com
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