Tinea faciei

 Tinea faciei is a fungal infection of the skin of the face.[1] It generally appears as a photosensitive painless red rash with small bumps and a raised edge appearing to grow outwards, usually over eyebrows or one side of the face.[1] It may feel wet or have some crusting, and overlying hairs may fall out easily.[2] There may be a mild itch.[3]

Tinea faciei
Other namesRingworm of the face
Mycose peau glabre - Dermatophytosis.jpg
Tinea faciei
SpecialtyDermatology
SymptomsFacial ringworm appears as one or more pink-to-red scaly patches which contain bumps, blisters, or scabs.They can be itchy, and it may get worse or feel sunburned after exposure to the sun.
Treatmenttopical creams and lotions: Terbinafine, Clotrimazole, Miconazole, Econazole, Oxiconazole, Ketoconazole, Sulconazole, Naftifine

TreatmentEdit

Most infections can be treated with topical antifungal medication. Rarely, more extensive or long-standing infections may require treatment with oral antifungals. The infection will still be contagious between 24 and 48 hours of the first treatment.

The ringworm should go away within 4–6 weeks after using effective treatment.

Note

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article
 Metasyntactic variable, which is released under the 
Creative Commons
Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License
.