%0 Journal Article %T Bedside Diagnosis for Disseminated Deep Dermatophytosis: a Case Series Study. %A Xia XJ %A Shen H %A Zhi HL %A Zhong Y %A Sang B %A Lv WW %A Li QP %A Liu ZH %A Xia XJ %A Shen H %A Zhi HL %A Zhong Y %A Sang B %A Lv WW %A Li QP %A Liu ZH %A Xia XJ %A Shen H %A Zhi HL %A Zhong Y %A Sang B %A Lv WW %A Li QP %A Liu ZH %J Mycopathologia %V 187 %N 2 %D Jun 2022 %M 35445313 %F 3.785 %R 10.1007/s11046-022-00633-w %X Deep cutaneous fungal infections including deep dermatophytosis are responsible for significant morbidity and mortality, especially in immunocompromised patients. Variable and longer turnaround time on tissue culture results delay diagnosis. We sought to seek the fast bedside diagnosis for disseminated deep dermatophytosis by direct microscopy using a blunt scalpel or needle aspiration before biopsy. This is a 6-year retrospective review of patients with a diagnosis of disseminated deep dermatophytosis seen at a single tertiary care institution. Trichophyton rubrum was isolated in four patients, and T. mentagrophyte complex in one patient. All the dermatophyte isolates can grow at 37 °C. Microscopy of purulence sampling from intact nodules demonstrated abundant septate hyphae, and also isolation from purulence was concordance with skin tissue culture. Ultrasound-guided sampling from non-eroded can yield purulence, and direct microscopy of purulence may facilitate rapid diagnosis of deep dermatophytosis and serve to prevent disease progression and dissemination.