Topical Ketoconazole Therapeutic Cheat Sheet
Ketoconazole is an imidazole antifungal that was initially FDA-approved in an oral formulation for the treatment of systemic fungal infections. While oral ketoconazole has largely fallen out of use due to safety concerns, including hepatotoxicity, endocrine dysregulation, and drug interactions, topical ketoconazole has proven to be a safe and effective treatment for superficial fungal infections. …
Ketoconazole is an imidazole antifungal that was initially FDA-approved in an oral formulation for the treatment of systemic fungal infections. While oral ketoconazole has largely fallen out of use due to safety concerns, including hepatotoxicity, endocrine dysregulation, and drug interactions, topical ketoconazole has proven to be a safe and effective treatment for superficial fungal infections. … Continue reading "Topical Ketoconazole Therapeutic Cheat Sheet"







Are AI chatbots a wave of the future in dermatology? An article in the November Journal of Drugs in Dermatology assessed dermatologists’ attitudes and beliefs toward artificial intelligence chatbots. Chatbot usage has grown in a variety of areas of society in recent years, and ChatGPT’s popularity shows there’s demand. So to what extent do dermatologists think AI chatbots will play a role in …
Patients with the above condition should be evaluated for what immunodeficiency?
A. C5-9
B. IgM
C. C3
D. B2-integrin
E. Immunoglobulin
To find out the correct answer and read the explanation, click here.
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At the Skin of Color Update 2024, we had the honor to learn from Dr. Rebecca Vasquez, Associate Professor at UT Southwestern Medical Center, regarding the evolving field of vitiligo management. Vitiligo affects between 0.5% to 2% of the global population, with no racial or gender preference, yet it carries a significant psychological burden for affected individuals.1 Dr. Vasquez emphasized that vi …
Macular dermal hyperpigmentation is an umbrella term, explains Dr. Pearl E. Grimes, symposium chair and clinical professor of dermatology at the University of California, Los Angeles. In an interview with Next Steps in Derm, in partnership with Pigmentary Disorders Exchange Symposium, Dr. Grimes outlines the most common types of macular dermal hyperpigmentation and the factors that may be at play …