Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
Acne vulgaris (AV) is a common inflammatory condition involving pilosebaceous unit. The pathogenesis of acne is multifactorial and skin microbiome is considered to be one of the key factors that aggravate inflammation. Malassezia spp is normal flora on the skin and several studies have reported its corelation with inflammatory AV lesion.
Malassezia have higher lipase activity compared to Propionibacterium acnes which triggers an increase in free fatty acid and glycerol, the chemotactic factors towards neutrophils and inducing inflammation in AV. Malassezia folliculitis (MF) is sometimes confused with and may present together with AV. Pruritus usually presents in MF but some studies also reported itching as common symptom in AV.
The objectives of this study were to identify the presence and the distribution of Malassezia spp. in facial AV lesions, to compare the distribution of Malassezia spp. between inflammatory and non-inflammatory lesions and to identify the association between Malassezia spp in acne lesions and pruritus symptom.
Full description
This study used cross sectional design study.
Subjects with eligible criteria were included. Subjects were divided into subjects with inflammatory lesions and subjects with non inflammatory lesions.
Physical examination consisted of assesment of AV severity (using Lehman criteria) and presence of pruritus based on visual analog scale. Clinical documetations were taken.
Follicular content of four inflammatory lesions or four non inflammatory lesions were collected for microscopic examination with KOH solution and fungal culture examination (using CHROMagar Malassezia, Dextrose Saboraud agar (DSA), and Tween 60-esculin agar).
The presence of Malassezia spp and its spore load in both groups were assesed and analyzed for its corelation with AV severity and presence of pruritus.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
120 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal