Diferencia entre revisiones de «Tinea cruris»

(Add Miconazole AntibioticDose entry)
 
Línea 36: Línea 36:
*Systemic antifungals reserved for patients who fail topical therapy
*Systemic antifungals reserved for patients who fail topical therapy
*Systemic antifungals that can be used include: [[terbinafine]], [[itraconazole]], and [[fluconazole]]
*Systemic antifungals that can be used include: [[terbinafine]], [[itraconazole]], and [[fluconazole]]
*{{AntibioticDose|drug=Miconazole|dose=2% cream applied topically BID x 2 weeks|context=Topical antifungal|disease=Tinea cruris|population=Adult}}


==Disposition==
==Disposition==

Revisión actual - 12:34 20 mar 2026

Background

  • Dermatophyte infection involving the crural fold
  • Colloquially known as 'jock itch'
  • Most commonly caused by Tinea rubrum
  • More common in men than women
  • May result from the spread of other concurrent tinea infections
  • More common in obese, diabetics, and immunodeficient

Tinea Types

Clinical Features

Tinea cruris
  • Begins with an erythematous patch on the proximal medial thigh
  • Inward spread with partial central clearing
  • Sharply demarcated border, erythematous, elevated
  • May spread to perineum, perianally, onto buttocks, or into gluteal cleft
  • Typically spares the scrotum

Differential Diagnosis

Testicular Diagnoses

Vulvovaginitis

Evaluation

  • Typically a clinical diagnosis
  • Scraped skin from affected area in KOH prep will show segmented hyphae

Management

  • Miconazole 2% cream applied topically BID x 2 weeks

Disposition

  • Outpatient

See Also

References

UpToDate, Tinitnalli's