Skin Infection | Molluscum Contagiosum |

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  • Опубликовано: 22 май 2024
  • Molluscum contagiosum is a viral infection that causes small, raised sores or bumps on the skin . The pathophysiology of molluscum contagiosum is as follows .
    Transmission:
    - The molluscum contagiosum virus is spread through direct skin-to-skin contact or indirect contact with contaminated objects.
    - The virus can be inoculated along a line of minor skin trauma, resulting in lesions arranged in a linear pattern.
    - Autoinoculation can occur through scratching or shaving over the lesions.
    Etiology:
    - The molluscum contagiosum virus is a member of the Poxviridae family and is an unclassified virus.
    - The virus replicates in the cytoplasm of epithelial cells, producing cytoplasmic inclusions and enlargement of infected cells.
    - The virus infects only the epidermis, and the initial infection occurs in the basal layer.
    Infection:
    - The incubation period is usually 2-7 weeks, but can be as long as 6 months.
    - The virus causes cellular proliferation, leading to lobulated epidermal growths that compress epidermal papillae.
    - The basal layer remains intact, and cells at the core of the lesion show the greatest distortion and are ultimately destroyed.
    - Large hyaline bodies (molluscum bodies) containing cytoplasmic masses of virus material are present in large numbers.
    Viral Characteristics:
    - Molluscum contagiosum is a DNA poxvirus and is largely, if not exclusively, a disease of humans.
    - The poxviruses are a large group of viruses with a high molecular weight and are especially adapted to epidermal cells.
    - Molluscum contagiosum virus has been grown in human foreskin grafted to athymic mice but not in other laboratory animals.
    Epidemiology:
    - Molluscum contagiosum is a common infection throughout the United States and accounts for approximately 1% of all skin disorders diagnosed.
    - The prevalence rate in patients with HIV is reported to be 5-18%, and the severity of infection is inversely related to the CD4 T-lymphocyte count.
    - The virus occurs throughout the world, and its incidence in most areas is not reliably known, but it is more prevalent in tropical areas.
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