Tinea Capitis (Scalp Ringworm)

ByDenise M. Aaron, MD, Dartmouth Geisel School of Medicine
Reviewed/Revised Sept 2023
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Tinea capitis is a dermatophyte infection of the scalp. Diagnosis is by clinical appearance and by examination of plucked hairs or hairs and scale on potassium hydroxide wet mount. Treatment involves oral antifungals.

Tinea capitis is a dermatophytosis that mainly affects children, is contagious, and can be epidemic.

Trichophyton tonsurans is the most common cause in the United States, followed by Microsporum canis and M. audouinii; other Trichophyton species (eg, T. schoenleinii, T. violaceum) are common elsewhere.

Tinea capitis causes the gradual appearance of round patches of dry scale, alopecia, or both. T. tonsurans infection causes black dot ringworm, in which hair shafts break at the scalp surface; M. audouinii infection causes gray patch ringworm, in which hair shafts break above the surface, leaving short stubs. Tinea capitis less commonly manifests as diffuse scaling, like dandruff, or in a diffuse pustular pattern.

Skin Lesion (Scales)
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Scales are heaped-up accumulations of horny epithelium. Scaling is a characteristic feature of many dermatophytoses, including tinea capitis, resulting in the large bald patches. In this image, scale is especially noticeable at the nape of the neck.
Image provided by Thomas Habif, MD.

Kerion

Dermatophyte infection occasionally leads to formation of a kerion, which is a large, boggy, inflammatory scalp mass caused by a severe inflammatory reaction to the dermatophyte. A kerion may have pustules and crusting and can be mistaken for an abscess. A kerion may result in scarring hair loss.

Kerion on Light Skin
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This photo shows a kerion, which is a large, boggy scalp mass caused by a severe inflammatory reaction to a scalp dermatophyte infection. Pustules and crusting are visible.
Image courtesy of www.doctorfungus.org © 2005.

Diagnosis of Tinea Capitis

  • Clinical appearance

  • Potassium hydroxide wet mount

  • Sometimes a Wood light examination and sometimes culture

Tinea capitis is diagnosed by clinical appearance and by potassium hydroxide wet mount of plucked hairs or of hairs and scale obtained by scraping or brushing. Spore size and appearance inside (endothrix) or outside (ectothrix) the hair shaft distinguish organisms and can help guide treatment.

Blue-green fluorescence during a Wood light examination is diagnostic for infection with M. canis and M. audouinii and can distinguish tinea from erythrasma.

Fungal culture of plucked hairs can be done when necessary. In a child, a scalp lesion that appears similar to an abscess may be a kerion; if necessary, cultures can help make the distinction.

Pearls & Pitfalls

  • Before draining a scalp abscess in a child, consider the diagnosis of kerion.

Differential diagnosis of tinea capitis includes

Treatment of Tinea Capitis

  • Oral antifungals

  • Selenium sulfide shampoo

  • Sometimes prednisone

(See table Options for Treatment of Superficial Fungal Infections.)

Key Points

  • Tinea capitis affects mostly children and can be contagious and epidemic.

  • Confirm tinea capitis by potassium hydroxide wet mount, fungal culture, or sometimes Wood light examination.

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