An Epidemiological Study of Human Dermatophytosis in Karaj (2001)

Message:
Abstract:
One of the problems of public health in Iran is mycotic inflection which its incidence is not known. The most important disease of them is dermatophytosis. In this regard, determination of various species of etiologic agent, infection source, the risk of contact to animals, and public training are necessary to perform epidemiologic studies. In this research 750 suspected samples (including 560 male and 190 female) were studied, in which 157 cases (21%) suffering from dermatophytosis and out of them, 100 cases were positive culture. Out of isolated dermatophytps 69% were anthropophilic 30% zoophilic and 1% were geophilic. Zoophilic agents include T. verrucosum 11% (11 cases), M. canis 10% (10 cases) and T. mentagrophytes 9% (9 cases). The most impairments were observed in 0 – 9 years of age groups and the agent was M. canis appearing tinea capitis. The most prevalent ringworm agent was E. floccosum which was seen in groin. The most prevalent tinea unguinm was in 0- 9 years and 10 – 19 years of age and its agent was T. mentagrophytes. The most prevalent tinea manuum was in 20 – 29 of age and its agent was T. rubrum.
Language:
English
Published:
Archives of Razi Institute, Volume:60 Issue: 1, Winter 2005
Page:
45
magiran.com/p734066  
دانلود و مطالعه متن این مقاله با یکی از روشهای زیر امکان پذیر است:
اشتراک شخصی
با عضویت و پرداخت آنلاین حق اشتراک یک‌ساله به مبلغ 1,390,000ريال می‌توانید 70 عنوان مطلب دانلود کنید!
اشتراک سازمانی
به کتابخانه دانشگاه یا محل کار خود پیشنهاد کنید تا اشتراک سازمانی این پایگاه را برای دسترسی نامحدود همه کاربران به متن مطالب تهیه نمایند!
توجه!
  • حق عضویت دریافتی صرف حمایت از نشریات عضو و نگهداری، تکمیل و توسعه مگیران می‌شود.
  • پرداخت حق اشتراک و دانلود مقالات اجازه بازنشر آن در سایر رسانه‌های چاپی و دیجیتال را به کاربر نمی‌دهد.
In order to view content subscription is required

Personal subscription
Subscribe magiran.com for 70 € euros via PayPal and download 70 articles during a year.
Organization subscription
Please contact us to subscribe your university or library for unlimited access!