Hello Curlfriends!!!A couple weeks ago my sister (Christina)
called me in a panic. Telling me that she had recently installed braids in my niece's
hair, and she had noticed a bald spot. The first thing, I said to her was you
have those braids too tight or maybe she is allergic to the weave. She went on
to also say that my niece was also complaining of an itchy scalp. The advice I gave
was... Take those braids out immediately!!! Christina took my advice, and took
the braids out. As she was taking the braids out… She noticed huge amounts of
hair coming out also from the scalp from the infected area. Well, She ended up
taken my niece to the doctor, and she was diagnosed with having Tinea Capitis
and was given a prescription-strength
medicated shampoo.
So what is Tinea Capitis? Well, Tinea capitis is the
scientific name for ringworm of the scalp.
Tinea capitis (ringworm) is a disease
caused by superficial fungal infection of the skin of the scalp, eyebrows, and
eyelashes, with a propensity for attacking hair shafts and follicles (see the image below).
Tinea
capitis is highly contagious, and most common in toddlers and school-age
children.
The fungi that cause tinea capitis produce spores that are
shed into the infected child's clothing, brushes or combs, and even into the
air around the child. These spores can survive for months on objects. Children
get tinea capitis after they come in contact with an infected person or animal,
or after they come in contact with spores in other ways. For example, one
common source of spores is classmates or adults who carry the spores on their
skin or scalp without being infected.
Tinea capitis varies from a scaly noninflamed dermatosis
resembling seborrheic dermatitis to an inflammatory disease with scaly erythematous
lesions and hair loss or alopecia that may progress to severely inflamed deep
abscesses termed kerion, with the potential for scarring and in some cases permanent alopecia.
Oh no! I hope it all clears up soon.
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