## Correct Answer: D. Kerion A **kerion** is a severe host inflammatory response to dermatophyte infection of the scalp, presenting as a pustular, boggy, tender nodule with drainage and regional lymphadenopathy. The clinical clue here is the **3-month duration** (chronic), **mild painful swelling**, and **pet dog exposure** (zoonotic source). In Indian pediatric practice, kerion is the most common severe scalp ringworm presentation, especially in children aged 5–15 years with animal contact. The condition represents a hypersensitivity reaction (Type IV) to dermatophyte antigens, not a bacterial infection. Common causative organisms in India include *Trichophyton mentagrophytes* and *Microsporum canis* (from dogs). The boggy, inflamed appearance with pustules and sometimes crusting is pathognomonic. Diagnosis is confirmed by KOH mount (branching hyphae) and fungal culture. Treatment requires systemic antifungal therapy (griseofulvin 20 mg/kg/day for 6–8 weeks or terbinafine) combined with topical antifungals and short-course oral corticosteroids to reduce inflammation. The pet dog should be examined and treated concurrently to prevent reinfection—a critical point in Indian household management. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Epidermoid cyst** — Epidermoid cysts are painless, slow-growing, firm, non-inflamed nodules with a central punctum. They do not cause pustulation, drainage, or regional lymphadenopathy. The acute inflammatory presentation with 3-month duration of painful swelling and pet dog exposure rules out this benign condition entirely. NBE may trap students who see 'scalp swelling' and think of common benign lesions. **B. Furuncle** — A furuncle is a bacterial infection (typically *Staphylococcus aureus*) of a hair follicle and surrounding dermis, presenting acutely with severe pain, erythema, and pustule formation. However, furuncles are usually solitary or few, resolve within 1–2 weeks with drainage, and do NOT have a 3-month indolent course. The chronic timeline and zoonotic exposure (pet dog) strongly favor fungal infection over bacterial. Furuncles also lack the boggy, inflammatory scalp appearance typical of kerion. **C. Folliculitis** — Folliculitis is superficial bacterial inflammation of hair follicles, presenting with small pustules and erythema. It is typically acute, self-limited, and responds to topical antibiotics within days to weeks. A 3-month painful swelling with regional lymphadenopathy is inconsistent with simple folliculitis. The chronic course and animal contact history point to a deeper, fungal process (kerion) rather than superficial bacterial folliculitis. ## High-Yield Facts - **Kerion** = severe host inflammatory response to scalp dermatophyte, NOT bacterial infection; presents as boggy pustular nodule with drainage and lymphadenopathy. - **Causative agents in India**: *Trichophyton mentagrophytes* (from animals), *Microsporum canis* (dog/cat), *T. violaceum* (human-to-human). - **Diagnosis**: KOH mount shows branching hyphae; fungal culture confirms species; Wood's lamp may show blue-green fluorescence (variable). - **Treatment**: Systemic antifungal (griseofulvin 20 mg/kg/day × 6–8 weeks OR terbinafine) + topical antifungal + short-course oral corticosteroids (prednisolone 0.5 mg/kg/day × 1–2 weeks) to reduce inflammation. - **Pet dog management**: Concurrent examination and treatment of animal source is essential in Indian household settings to prevent reinfection. - **Age group**: Most common in children 5–15 years; rare in adults due to sebaceous gland activity and scalp pH changes. ## Mnemonics **KERION = Fungal Hypersensitivity** **K**eratinophilic fungi + **E**xcessive host **R**esponse = **I**nflammatory **O**utburst **N**odule. Remember: kerion is the scalp's angry immune reaction to dermatophytes, not a bacterial pus collection. Use this when you see 'boggy pustular scalp swelling + animal contact.' **3-Month Rule for Scalp Infections** **Acute (days–weeks)**: bacterial (furuncle, folliculitis). **Chronic (weeks–months)**: fungal (kerion, tinea capitis). The 3-month timeline in this case is the red flag for fungal etiology. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs 'scalp swelling + pustules' with bacterial infections (furuncle, folliculitis) to lure students away from the chronic timeline and zoonotic exposure clues that point to fungal kerion. The trap is conflating acute bacterial pustules with chronic fungal inflammation. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian pediatric clinics, kerion is often misdiagnosed as bacterial infection and treated with antibiotics alone, leading to treatment failure. The key bedside clue is the **boggy, inflamed scalp with regional occipital/cervical lymphadenopathy** and **chronic course despite topical treatment**—always ask about animal contact and perform KOH mount before starting systemic therapy. _Reference: Robbins Ch. 24 (Infectious Diseases); Harrison Ch. 220 (Fungal Infections); OP Ghai Ch. 16 (Pediatric Dermatology)_
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