NYU’s Langone Health News reports:
Experts at NYU Langone Health who focus on the spread of contagious rashes document the first reported case in the United States of a sexually transmitted fungal infection that can take months to clear up, even with treatment.
The first report, which published online on June 5 in the journal JAMA Dermatology, describes a man in his 30s who developed tinea on his penis, buttocks, and limbs after returning home to New York City from a trip to England, Greece, and California.
Genetic tests of fungal samples collected from the patient’s rashes revealed that the infection was caused by the species Trichophyton mentagrophytes type VII (TMVII). This sexually transmitted form of ringworm has been increasingly diagnosed throughout Europe, with 13 instances reported in France in 2023, mostly in men who have sex with men.
Notably, the man in the current study said he had sex with multiple male partners during his travels, none of whom reported similar skin issues.
Read the full article. There’s much more. The story has been picked up by the far-right Epoch Times and you can guess how that’s going on social media.
Healthcare providers should be aware that Trichophyton mentagrophytes type VII [TMVII] is the latest in a group of severe skin infections to have now reached the United States. Sexually transmitted infection among MSM. First case-patient in the US. https://t.co/iDgYwZnk4e
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