Distribution of Malassezia species on healthy human skin in Bosnia and Herzegovina: correlation with body part, age and gender

The genus Malasezia currently includes fourteen species that have been isolated from healthy and diseased human and animal skin. However, there were differences with respect to the species most commonly isolated, not only in patients with various skin diseases but also between healthy individuals....

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Asja Prohic, Dubravka Simic, Tamara Jovovic Sadikovic, Mersiha Krupalija-Fazlic
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Tehran University of Medical Sciences 2014-08-01
Series:Iranian Journal of Microbiology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ijm.tums.ac.ir/index.php/ijm/article/view/395
id doaj-9c76bd57f1754cc28561309eda42b611
record_format Article
spelling doaj-9c76bd57f1754cc28561309eda42b6112020-12-02T05:59:33ZengTehran University of Medical SciencesIranian Journal of Microbiology2008-32892008-44472014-08-0164Distribution of Malassezia species on healthy human skin in Bosnia and Herzegovina: correlation with body part, age and genderAsja Prohic0Dubravka Simic1Tamara Jovovic Sadikovic2Mersiha Krupalija-Fazlic3Department of Dermatovenerology, University Clinical Center Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina.Department of Dermatology and Venereology, University Hospital Mostar, Bosnia and Herzegovina.Department of Dermatovenerology, University Clinical Center Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina.Department of Dermatovenerology, University Clinical Center Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. The genus Malasezia currently includes fourteen species that have been isolated from healthy and diseased human and animal skin. However, there were differences with respect to the species most commonly isolated, not only in patients with various skin diseases but also between healthy individuals. The aim of this study was to analyze the prevalence of Malassezia species from clinically normal skin of the scalp and trunk of healthy individuals and to examine if the range of species varies according to body site, gender and age.The study was conducted at the Department of Dermatovenerology, University Clinical Center in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina from December 2012 to May 2013. One hundred healthy men and women with no skin diseases and aged from <1 to 82 years were studied. The samples were obtained by scraping the skin surface from the upper and middle part of trunk and from scalps of all subjects and then incubated on modified Dixon agar. The yeasts isolated were identified by their morphological and physiological properties according to Guillot et al. method.M. sympodialis was the predominant species on trunk skin in older subjects, M. restricta on scalp skin in age groups 21-35 years, while M. globosa was identified as common species in adults (36-50 years), both from scalp skin and trunk skin. From the trunk skin M. furfur was the most frequent in children.This study confirmed that cutaneous Malassezia microbiota in healthy subjects varies by body part and age but not by gender. https://ijm.tums.ac.ir/index.php/ijm/article/view/395Malasseziahealthy skinidentificationspecies
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Asja Prohic
Dubravka Simic
Tamara Jovovic Sadikovic
Mersiha Krupalija-Fazlic
spellingShingle Asja Prohic
Dubravka Simic
Tamara Jovovic Sadikovic
Mersiha Krupalija-Fazlic
Distribution of Malassezia species on healthy human skin in Bosnia and Herzegovina: correlation with body part, age and gender
Iranian Journal of Microbiology
Malassezia
healthy skin
identification
species
author_facet Asja Prohic
Dubravka Simic
Tamara Jovovic Sadikovic
Mersiha Krupalija-Fazlic
author_sort Asja Prohic
title Distribution of Malassezia species on healthy human skin in Bosnia and Herzegovina: correlation with body part, age and gender
title_short Distribution of Malassezia species on healthy human skin in Bosnia and Herzegovina: correlation with body part, age and gender
title_full Distribution of Malassezia species on healthy human skin in Bosnia and Herzegovina: correlation with body part, age and gender
title_fullStr Distribution of Malassezia species on healthy human skin in Bosnia and Herzegovina: correlation with body part, age and gender
title_full_unstemmed Distribution of Malassezia species on healthy human skin in Bosnia and Herzegovina: correlation with body part, age and gender
title_sort distribution of malassezia species on healthy human skin in bosnia and herzegovina: correlation with body part, age and gender
publisher Tehran University of Medical Sciences
series Iranian Journal of Microbiology
issn 2008-3289
2008-4447
publishDate 2014-08-01
description The genus Malasezia currently includes fourteen species that have been isolated from healthy and diseased human and animal skin. However, there were differences with respect to the species most commonly isolated, not only in patients with various skin diseases but also between healthy individuals. The aim of this study was to analyze the prevalence of Malassezia species from clinically normal skin of the scalp and trunk of healthy individuals and to examine if the range of species varies according to body site, gender and age.The study was conducted at the Department of Dermatovenerology, University Clinical Center in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina from December 2012 to May 2013. One hundred healthy men and women with no skin diseases and aged from <1 to 82 years were studied. The samples were obtained by scraping the skin surface from the upper and middle part of trunk and from scalps of all subjects and then incubated on modified Dixon agar. The yeasts isolated were identified by their morphological and physiological properties according to Guillot et al. method.M. sympodialis was the predominant species on trunk skin in older subjects, M. restricta on scalp skin in age groups 21-35 years, while M. globosa was identified as common species in adults (36-50 years), both from scalp skin and trunk skin. From the trunk skin M. furfur was the most frequent in children.This study confirmed that cutaneous Malassezia microbiota in healthy subjects varies by body part and age but not by gender.
topic Malassezia
healthy skin
identification
species
url https://ijm.tums.ac.ir/index.php/ijm/article/view/395
work_keys_str_mv AT asjaprohic distributionofmalasseziaspeciesonhealthyhumanskininbosniaandherzegovinacorrelationwithbodypartageandgender
AT dubravkasimic distributionofmalasseziaspeciesonhealthyhumanskininbosniaandherzegovinacorrelationwithbodypartageandgender
AT tamarajovovicsadikovic distributionofmalasseziaspeciesonhealthyhumanskininbosniaandherzegovinacorrelationwithbodypartageandgender
AT mersihakrupalijafazlic distributionofmalasseziaspeciesonhealthyhumanskininbosniaandherzegovinacorrelationwithbodypartageandgender
_version_ 1724408923761410048