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Wed Apr 25, 2007 5:52 pm |
From the Am Annals Dermat:
Microsporum gypseum is fungi that can be found in animals, most frequently cats and rodents.6 Of the geophilic dermatophytes that infect humans, Microsporum gypseum is the most frequent, but despite the ease with which it can be isolated, it only occasionally causes dermatophytosis, thus suggesting a certain natural resistance to the infection or that the fungus presents a low pathogenic capability.5,7,8,9
The treatment of choice is oral griseofulvin, at a dose of 20-25mg/kg/day, over a six to eight-week period.10
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