Abstract:In an open study, 19 infants with a bipolar seborrhoeic rash were treated with ketoconazole 2% in cream once a day and evaluated over 10 days of treatment. At day 10, 78.9% of patients were almost cleared. Percutaneous absorption peaked 1–3 h after topical treatment, and was minimal. No plasma ketoconazole accumulation over the 10-day treatment was detected. Treatment failures corresponded to histologically psoriasiform eruptions and probable atopic dermatitis.
“…The anti-inflammatory effect of ketoconazole may have had a nonspecific effect similar to that reported for infantile seborrheic dermatitis. 12 However, on direct microscopic examination, high cellularity was cor-…”
Background: A type of neonatal cephalic pustulosis that is clinically similar to classic neonatal acne recently has been linked to Malassezia furfur infection. To correlate the mycological and clinical findings in neonates with cephalic pustulosis, we carried out a prospective case-control study in a neonatal unit from February to April 1997 using new techniques for classifying Malassezia species.Observations: Nineteen patients with cephalic pustulosis and 19 controls younger than 45 days were studied among 161 consecutively hospitalized infants. Cultures from swabs and smears of pustules were obtained from patients, and swabs from healthy site-matched skin were obtained from controls. Three patients were excluded from the study because another cause of pustulosis was found.
“…The anti-inflammatory effect of ketoconazole may have had a nonspecific effect similar to that reported for infantile seborrheic dermatitis. 12 However, on direct microscopic examination, high cellularity was cor-…”
Background: A type of neonatal cephalic pustulosis that is clinically similar to classic neonatal acne recently has been linked to Malassezia furfur infection. To correlate the mycological and clinical findings in neonates with cephalic pustulosis, we carried out a prospective case-control study in a neonatal unit from February to April 1997 using new techniques for classifying Malassezia species.Observations: Nineteen patients with cephalic pustulosis and 19 controls younger than 45 days were studied among 161 consecutively hospitalized infants. Cultures from swabs and smears of pustules were obtained from patients, and swabs from healthy site-matched skin were obtained from controls. Three patients were excluded from the study because another cause of pustulosis was found.
“…После удаления чешуек и корок в качестве противовос-палительных средств возможно нанесение слабых топиче-ских кортикостероидов: мазь с 1% гидрокортизоном, 0,1% преднизолоном, гидрокортизоном-17-бутиратом [8][9][10].…”
Section: дифференциальная диагностикаunclassified
“…При тяжелом с еборейном дерматите, характеризую-щемся генерализованным или торпидным течением про-цесса, рекомендованы антимикотические препараты для перорального применения (кетоконазол, тербинафин, итраконазол, флуконазол) [5,8,9,11,13].…”
“…Die topische Anwendung von Ketokonazol wird bei fehlenden Hinweisen für eine Resorption als unbedenklich erachtet [32,33]. Eine gute bis sehr gute Wirkung einer 2prozentigen Ketokonazolcreme wurde von Taïeb et al [33] bei 75% der Kinder innerhalb von 10 Tagen dokumentiert.…”
Section: Histologieunclassified
“…Eine gute bis sehr gute Wirkung einer 2prozentigen Ketokonazolcreme wurde von Taïeb et al [33] bei 75% der Kinder innerhalb von 10 Tagen dokumentiert. Häufig sind nur rückfettende Massnahmen bereits erfolgreich, wobei bei Bedarf kurzfristig diese Therapie mit schwach wirksamen lokalen Kortikosteroiden ergänzt werden kann.…”
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.