Onychomycosis in So Paulo, Brazil
Fecha
2009Autor
Nunes, Fabiane G [Brasil. Universidade Federal de Sao Paulo (UNIFESP)]
Tomimori-Yamashita, Jane [Brasil. Universidade Federal de Sao Paulo]
Urrutia, Milton [Universidad Austral de Chile]
Zaror, Luis [Universidad Austral de Chile,Valdivia]
Silva, Víctor [Chile. Universidad Mayor]
Ubicación geográfica
Notas
HERRAMIENTAS
Resumen
Onychomycosis is a fungal infection of the nails with broad aetiological scope, and it represents 18-40% of all onychopathies and 39% of all superficial mycotic infections. From July 1996 to December 1999, samples of nails were collected from 588 patients with presumptive diagnosis of onychomycosis at the Dermatology and Mycology Divisions EPM\UNIFESP, Brazil, and the diagnosis was confirmed in 247 of these cases. The most common pathogens isolated in this study were yeasts in 52% of positive cultures (Candida albicans 18.3%, Candida parapsilosis 13.8%, other species of Candida 15.4% and other yeasts 4.6%), followed by dermatophytes in 40.6% of positive cultures (the most commonly isolated organisms were Trichophyton rubrum in 33.2%, followed by Trichophyton mentagrophytes in 6.3% and others 1.2%). Non-dermatophyte moulds were isolated in 7.4% of positive cultures (Fusarium spp. 4.5%, Nattrassia mangiferae 2.3% and Aspergillus spp. 0.6%). Distal and lateral subungual onychomycosis (DLSO) was the commonest clinical pattern 44.6% followed by free edge onycholysis (FEO) 38.8% and others. In conclusion, this study demonstrated that T. rubrum is the main agent causing onychomycosis in toenails, and species of genus Candida were the main agents isolated in fingernail onychomycosis in our region.
URI
https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007/s11046-009-9209-5.pdfhttps://doi.org/10.1007/s11046-009-9209-5
http://repositorio.umayor.cl/xmlui/handle/sibum/2748
Coleccion/es a la/s que pertenece:
Si usted es autor(a) de este documento y NO desea que su publicación tenga acceso público en este repositorio, por favor complete el formulario aquí.
Ítems relacionados
Mostrando ítems relacionados por Título, autor o materia.
-
Aberrant localization of fusion receptors involved in regulated exocytosis in salivary glands of Sjogren's syndrome patients is linked to ectopic mucin secretion.
Barrera, María José [Universidad de Chile]; Sánchez, Marianela [Universidad de Chile]; Aguilera, Sergio [Chile. Clínica INDISA]; Alliende, Cecilia [Universidad de Chile]; Bahamondes, Verónica [Universidad de Chile]; Molina, Claudio [Chile. Universidad Mayor]; Leyton, Cecilia [Universidad de Chile]; Quest, Andrew F.G. [Universidad de Chile]; Urzúa, Ulises [Universidad de Chile]; Castro, Isabel [Universidad de Chile]; González, Sergio [Chile. Universidad Mayor]; Sung, Hsiao Hsin [Universidad de Chile]; Albornoz, Amelina [Universidad de Chile]; Hermoso, Marcela [Universidad de Chile]; González, María-Julieta [Universidad de Chile] (Facultad de Ciencias, 2012)Sjögren's syndrome (SS) is a chronic inflammatory autoimmune disease that mainly affects tear and salivary glands, whereby SS-patients frequently complain of eye and mouth dryness. Salivary acinar cells of SS-patients ... -
Impact of Dietary Lipids on Colonic Function and Microbiota: An Experimental Approach Involving Orlistat-Induced Fat Malabsorption in Human Volunteers
Fujio, Sayaka [Universidad de Chile. INTA]; Navarrete, Paola [Universidad de Chile. INTA]; Ugalde, Juan A. [Chile. Universidad Mayor. Centro de Genómica y Bioinformática]; Magne, Fabien [Universidad de Chile]; Carrasco-Pozo, Catalina [Universidad de Chile. Facultad de Medicina]; Tralma, Karina [Universidad de Chile. Facultad de Medicina]; Quezada, María Paz [Universidad de Chile. Facultad de Medicina]; Hurtado, Carmen [Universidad de Chile]; Covarrubias, Natalia [Universidad de Chile]; Brignardello, Jerusa [Universidad de Chile. INTA]; Henríquez, Daniela [Universidad de Chile. INTA]; Gotteland, Martin [Universidad de Chile. Facultad de Medicina] (CIENCIAS, 2016)OBJECTIVES: High-fat diets alter gut microbiota and barrier function, inducing metabolic endotoxemia and low-grade inflammation. Whether these effects are due to the high dietary lipid content or to the concomitant decrease ... -
DEF8 and Autophagy-Associated Genes are Altered in Mild Cognitive Impairment, Probable Alzheimer’s Disease Patients and a Transgenic Model of the Disease
Leyton, Esteban [Chile. Universidad Mayor. Centro de Biología Integrativa]; Matus, Diego [Chile. Universidad Mayor. Centro de Biología Integrativa]; Espinoza, Sandra [Chile. Universidad Mayor. Centro de Biología Integrativa]; Benítez, José Matías [Chile. Universidad Mayor. Centro de Biología Integrativa]; Cortés, Bastián [Chile. Universidad Mayor. Centro de Biología Integrativa]; Gómez, Wileidy [Chile. Universidad Mayor. Centro de Biología Integrativa]; Arévalo, Nohela B. [Chile. Universidad Mayor. Centro de Biología Integrativa]; Murgas, Paola [Chile. Universidad Mayor. Centro de Biología Integrativa]; Manque Ramírez, Patricio [Chile. Universidad Mayor. Centro de Genómica y Bioinformática]; Woehlbier, Ute [Chile. Universidad Mayor. Centro de Biología Integrativa]; Durán-Aniotz, Claudia; Hetz, Claudio; Behrens, María Isabel; San Martín, Carol D. [Chile. Universidad Mayor. Centro de Biología Integrativa]; Nassif, Melissa [Chile. Universidad Mayor. Centro de Biología Integrativa] (IOS Press, 2021-02-19)Background:Disturbances in the autophagy/endolysosomal systems are proposed as early signatures of Alzheimer’s disease (AD). However, few studies are available concerning autophagy gene expression in AD patients. Objective:To ...