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  2. These Pictures Will Help You Identify the Most Common ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/pictures-help-identify-most-common...

    What it looks like: Athlete’s foot is a rash caused by a fungal infection of the skin. People typically develop a rash between the toes, and the skin becomes white, moist, and falls apart ...

  3. Athlete's foot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Athlete's_foot

    Athlete's foot, known medically as tinea pedis, is a common skin infection of the feet caused by a fungus. [2] Signs and symptoms often include itching, scaling, cracking and redness. [3] In rare cases the skin may blister. [6] Athlete's foot fungus may infect any part of the foot, but most often grows between the toes. [3]

  4. Fungal infection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fungal_infection

    [3] [6] Superficial fungal infections include common tinea of the skin, such as tinea of the body, groin, hands, feet and beard, and yeast infections such as pityriasis versicolor. [7] Subcutaneous types include eumycetoma and chromoblastomycosis, which generally affect tissues in and beneath the skin.

  5. List of types of tinea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_types_of_tinea

    Fungal infection of the foot may be acquired (or reacquired) in many ways, such as by walking in an infected locker room, by using an infested bathtub, by sharing a towel used by someone with the disease, by touching the feet with infected fingers (such as after scratching another infected area of the body), or by wearing fungi-contaminated ...

  6. How to treat athlete’s foot - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/treat-athlete-foot-203742074.html

    “Athlete’s foot, also known as tinea pedis, is a fungal infection that affects the skin of the feet,” explains Dr. Mohammad Rimawi, a board-certified podiatrist in New York City. Left ...

  7. Tinea cruris - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tinea_cruris

    Tinea cruris is often associated with athlete's foot and fungal nail infections. [4] [5] Rubbing from clothing, excessive sweating, diabetes and obesity are risk factors. [6] [8] It is contagious and can be transmitted person-to-person by skin-to-skin contact or by contact with contaminated sports clothing and sharing towels. [3] [5]

  8. Eumycetoma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eumycetoma

    Eumycetoma, also known as Madura foot, [1] [6] is a persistent fungal infection of the skin and the tissues just under the skin, affecting most commonly the feet, although it can occur in hands and other body parts. [5]

  9. Trichophyton rubrum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trichophyton_rubrum

    Trichophyton rubrum is a dermatophytic fungus in the phylum Ascomycota.It is an exclusively clonal, [2] anthropophilic saprotroph that colonizes the upper layers of dead skin, and is the most common cause of athlete's foot, fungal infection of nail, jock itch, and ringworm worldwide. [3]