Abstract

Between 1994 and 2000, 63 isolates of Trichophyton violaceum and five isolates of Trichophyton soudanense were recorded in both private and public laboratories in Hamilton, New Zealand. A retrospective analysis of medical records of these patients was performed. From these 68 isolates, 58 were recovered from scalp specimens and 10 were recovered from other body sites. There were 51 patients with tinea capitis and nine patients in the tinea corporis group. Six patients had more than one isolate reported at different laboratories. As expected, the vast majority of scalp infections (46/51 patients) were children, with an overall median age of 6 years (range 8 months to 66 years). All patients in the tinea capitis group, except one, were refugee immigrants from East Africa. Of nine patients in the tinea corporis group, six were refugees from the same area. For tinea capitis, 31 patients received systemic antifungal therapy for at least 4 weeks, with either terbinafine (21 patients), griseofulvin (four patients) or itraconazole (six patients). Five patients received topical antifungal creams or shampoo as monotherapy only. The remainder (15 patients) received either no therapy or no record was available. The emergence of these two pathogens as causes of tinea capitis in Hamilton closely correlates with the increasing number of refugees from endemic areas. There is a high rate of person-to-person transmission with these anthropophilic organisms in children as well as adults in the family. Transmission of infection to the local population has been observed, but there is no evidence to date to suggest that these organisms have become endemic in the local population.

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