Prevalence and associated factors for isolated Malassezia species in patients with Dandruff in Mekelle City, Tigrai, Ethiopia

ObjectiveDandruff, a condition caused by lipophilic Malassezia fungi, is an excessive shed of dead skin cells from the scalp. Effective preventive and curative measures of the condition depend on knowledge and understanding of the prevalence of the condition, the common etiologic species, and the as...

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Published in:BMC RESEARCH NOTES
Main Authors: Gebrezihier, Brhane Gebremedhin; Abdulkadir, Mahmud; Sbhatu, Desta Berhe; Tsegay, Ephrem; Berhe, Goitom Gebreyohannes
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SPRINGERNATURE 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001352926200002
author Gebrezihier
Brhane Gebremedhin; Abdulkadir
Mahmud; Sbhatu
Desta Berhe; Tsegay
Ephrem; Berhe
Goitom Gebreyohannes
spellingShingle Gebrezihier
Brhane Gebremedhin; Abdulkadir
Mahmud; Sbhatu
Desta Berhe; Tsegay
Ephrem; Berhe
Goitom Gebreyohannes
Prevalence and associated factors for isolated Malassezia species in patients with Dandruff in Mekelle City, Tigrai, Ethiopia
Life Sciences & Biomedicine - Other Topics; Science & Technology - Other Topics
author_facet Gebrezihier
Brhane Gebremedhin; Abdulkadir
Mahmud; Sbhatu
Desta Berhe; Tsegay
Ephrem; Berhe
Goitom Gebreyohannes
author_sort Gebrezihier
spelling Gebrezihier, Brhane Gebremedhin; Abdulkadir, Mahmud; Sbhatu, Desta Berhe; Tsegay, Ephrem; Berhe, Goitom Gebreyohannes
Prevalence and associated factors for isolated Malassezia species in patients with Dandruff in Mekelle City, Tigrai, Ethiopia
BMC RESEARCH NOTES
English
Article
ObjectiveDandruff, a condition caused by lipophilic Malassezia fungi, is an excessive shed of dead skin cells from the scalp. Effective preventive and curative measures of the condition depend on knowledge and understanding of the prevalence of the condition, the common etiologic species, and the associated factors. This study aimed to investigate the prevalence, common etiologic species, and associated factors of Malassezia infection in Mekelle City, Ethiopia.MethodA facility-based cross-sectional study was conducted from February 2019 to June 2020 involving 217 participants who were visiting dermatology clinics to seek treatment for dandruff conditions. Information on the socio-demographic characteristics and hair care behaviors of the participants was obtained. Isolation and identification of Malassezia species from scalp scrapings using cultural and biochemical tests were carried out.ResultsOut of the 217 participants with dandruff, 111 (51.15%) were positive for Malassezia fungi. One hundred forty (140) Malassezia isolates were collected from the 111 positive participants. Further study of the isolates yielded three etiologic species: Malassezia globosa (67.15%), M. furfur (21.70%), and M. restricta (12.15%). Demographic characteristics, namely gender (AOR = 2.605; 95%CI: 1.427 - 4.757) and age (AOR = 2.667; 95%CI: 1.046 - 6.795), as well as hair care behaviors, namely use of hair oil (AOR = 2.964; 95%CI: 1.288 - 6.820), were associated with the presence of Malassezia species. However, the use of anti-dandruff shampoo (AOR = 2.782; 95%CI: 1.301 - 10.993) was negatively associated with the presence of Malassezia species among the participants with dandruff conditions. These findings open opportunities to devise effective prevention, management, and control measures for Malassezia-based dandruff conditions.
SPRINGERNATURE

1756-0500
2024
17
1
10.1186/s13104-024-06998-z
Life Sciences & Biomedicine - Other Topics; Science & Technology - Other Topics
Green Accepted, gold
WOS:001352926200002
https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001352926200002
title Prevalence and associated factors for isolated Malassezia species in patients with Dandruff in Mekelle City, Tigrai, Ethiopia
title_short Prevalence and associated factors for isolated Malassezia species in patients with Dandruff in Mekelle City, Tigrai, Ethiopia
title_full Prevalence and associated factors for isolated Malassezia species in patients with Dandruff in Mekelle City, Tigrai, Ethiopia
title_fullStr Prevalence and associated factors for isolated Malassezia species in patients with Dandruff in Mekelle City, Tigrai, Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Prevalence and associated factors for isolated Malassezia species in patients with Dandruff in Mekelle City, Tigrai, Ethiopia
title_sort Prevalence and associated factors for isolated Malassezia species in patients with Dandruff in Mekelle City, Tigrai, Ethiopia
container_title BMC RESEARCH NOTES
language English
format Article
description ObjectiveDandruff, a condition caused by lipophilic Malassezia fungi, is an excessive shed of dead skin cells from the scalp. Effective preventive and curative measures of the condition depend on knowledge and understanding of the prevalence of the condition, the common etiologic species, and the associated factors. This study aimed to investigate the prevalence, common etiologic species, and associated factors of Malassezia infection in Mekelle City, Ethiopia.MethodA facility-based cross-sectional study was conducted from February 2019 to June 2020 involving 217 participants who were visiting dermatology clinics to seek treatment for dandruff conditions. Information on the socio-demographic characteristics and hair care behaviors of the participants was obtained. Isolation and identification of Malassezia species from scalp scrapings using cultural and biochemical tests were carried out.ResultsOut of the 217 participants with dandruff, 111 (51.15%) were positive for Malassezia fungi. One hundred forty (140) Malassezia isolates were collected from the 111 positive participants. Further study of the isolates yielded three etiologic species: Malassezia globosa (67.15%), M. furfur (21.70%), and M. restricta (12.15%). Demographic characteristics, namely gender (AOR = 2.605; 95%CI: 1.427 - 4.757) and age (AOR = 2.667; 95%CI: 1.046 - 6.795), as well as hair care behaviors, namely use of hair oil (AOR = 2.964; 95%CI: 1.288 - 6.820), were associated with the presence of Malassezia species. However, the use of anti-dandruff shampoo (AOR = 2.782; 95%CI: 1.301 - 10.993) was negatively associated with the presence of Malassezia species among the participants with dandruff conditions. These findings open opportunities to devise effective prevention, management, and control measures for Malassezia-based dandruff conditions.
publisher SPRINGERNATURE
issn
1756-0500
publishDate 2024
container_volume 17
container_issue 1
doi_str_mv 10.1186/s13104-024-06998-z
topic Life Sciences & Biomedicine - Other Topics; Science & Technology - Other Topics
topic_facet Life Sciences & Biomedicine - Other Topics; Science & Technology - Other Topics
accesstype Green Accepted, gold
id WOS:001352926200002
url https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001352926200002
record_format wos
collection Web of Science (WoS)
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