Tinea Versicolor (Pityriasis Versicolor)

Figure 4.21 A: Pityriasis versicolor (Courtesy of Dr. Paul Getz) B: Tinea nigra (Courtesy of Dr. Marcus Henrique de Sousa Brito Xavier, Brazil) C: Piedra (Courtesy of Doctor Fungus, www.doctorfungus.org)
Figure 4.21
A: Pityriasis versicolor
(Courtesy of Dr. Paul Getz)
B: Tinea nigra
(Courtesy of Dr. Marcus
Henrique de Sousa Brito
Xavier, Brazil
)
C: Piedra
(Courtesy of Doctor Fungus,
www.doctorfungus.org
)
(Figure 4.21A)
  • Malassezia furfur (yeast form: Pityrosporum ovale or P. orbiculare)
  • Yeast part of normal cutaneous flora, but pathogenic when transforms into mycelial form; requires lipid enrichment when growing
  • M. furfur produces azelaic acid (a dicarboxylic acid) → blocks melanin synthesis causing ↓ pigmentation
  • Presents as hyper- and hypopigmented macules and patches with fine scale in lipid-rich areas of skin; common in summer; facial lesions common in infants
  • KOH: “ziti and meatballs” (short, thick hyphae with grape-like spores); culture requires lipid enrichment (olive oil overlay); Wood’s light shows pale yellow fluorescence
  • Treatment: topical imidazoles, selenium sulfide, zinc pyrithione, or oral ketoconazole 400 mg qweek × 2 doses