Hair
Superficial Folliculitis
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Superficial Folliculitis
, Folliculitis, Staphylococcal Folliculitis
Pathophysiology
Usually caused by
Bacterial Infection
Superficial inflammation of
Hair Follicle
Only upper
Hair Follicle
involved
Contrast with
Deep Folliculitis
Risk Factors
Local
Trauma
Abrasion
Surgical wounds or draining abscess
Shaving
Aggravates
Staphylococcus aureus
Folliculitis
Exposure to
Occlusive Dressing
Tar
Adhesive plaster
Plastic
Occlusive Dressing
s
Causes
See Folliculitis
Staphylococcal Folliculitis (most common)
Affects beard area (Folliculitis barbae)
Also affects axillae and legs
Aggravated by shaving
Pseudomonas Folliculitis
(
Hot Tub Folliculitis
)
Pseudofolliculitis Barbae
Eosinophilic Folliculitis
(HIV)
Superficial Fungal Infection
Malassezia Folliculitis
Dermatophyte Folliculitis
Candida Folliculitis
Viral Folliculitis
Herpetic Folliculitis
Molluscum Folliculitis
Drug-Induced-Folliculitis
Steroid Folliculitis (corticoseroids)
Phenytoin
Lithium
Isoniazid
Cyclosporine
Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor Inhibitor
s or
EGFR Inhibitor
s (e.g.
Erbitux
,
Vectibix
, Tarceva,
Iressa
,
Tykerb
)
Symptoms
Non-tender or minimally tender
Variably pruritic
Signs
Characteristics
Pustule
confined to
Hair Follicle
Hair Shaft
may be seen at center of lesion
Yellow or gray coloration with erythema
Distribution: Any skin bearing hair
Head and neck
Trunk
Buttocks
Extremities
Absent features
No associated fever or systemic symptoms
Differential Diagnosis
Acne Vulgaris
Acne Keloidalis Nuchae
Papulopustular
Rosacea
Keratosis Pilaris
(younger patients)
Hidradenitis Suppurativa
Cutaneous Candidiasis
(Candida albicans)
Seen in febrile hospitalized patients
Beard area Folliculitis
See
Beard Dermatitis
Trunk Folliculitis
Tinea Corporis
(
Ringworm
)
Pustular
Miliaria
Not perifollicular
Occurs in hot, humid weather
Labs (As Indicated)
Pustule
Gram Stain
and Culture
KOH Preparation
Fungal Culture
Skin Biopsy
Nasal
MRSA
Swab
Management
Gene
ral
Eliminate provocative agents (tar,
Mineral Oil
)
Keep affected areas clean and dry
Avoid occlusive clothing and excessive sweating
Consider warm, wet
Burow's Solution
Consider
Topical Corticosteroid
s for significant associated inflammation
Approach to infection management
Staphylococcal Folliculitis is most common, but is not the only Folliculitis cause (see causes above)
Consider
Pseudomonas Folliculitis
(
Hot Tub Folliculitis
)
Consider
Gram Negative
Folliculitis
Consider fungal Folliculitis (dermatophyte Folliculitis, candida Folliculitis)
Staphylococcal Folliculitis
Topical Antibiotic
s
Apply
Mupirocin
ointment three times daily to affected areas for 7 to 10 days or
Topical
Clindamycin
(
Cleocin-T
) twice daily for 7 to 10 days
Systemic
Antibiotic
s (refractory to topical agents)
Avoid
Macrolide
s due to increased resistance
Dicloxacillin
250 to 500 mg orally four times daily for 7 to 10 days or
Cephalexin
(
Keflex
) 250 to 500 mg orally four times daily for 7 to 10 days or
Cefadroxil
(
Duricef
) 500 mg orally twice daily for 7 to 10 days or
Doxycycline
100 mg orally twice daily for 7 to 10 days (
MRSA
coverage) or
Trimethoprim-Sulfamethoxazole (
Septra
,
Bactrim
) orally twice daily for 7 to 10 days (
MRSA
coverage)
Prevention (Suppression of infection)
Daily washing with antimicrobial skin cleanser (e.g.
Benzoyl Peroxide
)
Topical
Clindamycin
(
Cleocin
T) after shaving
Mupirocin
(
Bactroban
) in nostrils
Course
Heals without scarring
References
Jackson in Rosen (2022) UpToDate, Accessed online 8/8/2022
Fitzpatrick (1992) Color Atlas Dermatology
Habif (1996) Dermatology, p. 248-51
Stulberg (2002) Am Fam Physician 66(1):119-24 [PubMed]
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