Dermatosis Tropical

Dermatoses are a large group of skin diseases that occupy one of the leading places among other diseases that occur with damage to the skin. The word "dermatosis" comes from two Greek words: "derma" - skin and "zoon" - animal. This term emphasizes its infectious nature or parasitic origin. The concept of “tropical dermatoses” implies a wide range of skin diseases caused mainly by exogenous factors, due to which there is contact between the skin and the pathogen that enters both the body and the skin. In the second case, a specific lesion element appears on the skin, called a trophic ulcer. Treatment and outcome of an exogenous irritating factor reflect the characteristic features of this process - size, shape, depth of the lesion. Each individual form of dermotochnoses is characterized by its own special elements. Trophic phenomena are characteristic, represented by clearly expressed changes in color (hyperemia), density (edema), and depth (ulcer). In the treatment of patients, morphological changes in the skin and the presence of a number of main provoking factors (reaction of the receptor apparatus of the human skin to the inflammatory process and intoxication of the body) are taken into account. The most important factors provoking the development of exogenous stimuli are extreme environmental conditions (for example, high