Aa
Aa
A
A
A
Close
Avatar universal

Systemic Fungal Infection Prostatitis

Hi, does anyone have information on systemic fungal infections? I don't believe I have candida, I think it is more along the lines of some type of tinea. It is in my prostate and has spread throughout my body. I have tried multiple antibiotics and have been on the candida diet for years, it all helps a little but nothing gets rid of it and it keeps spreading out. The symptoms are numerous and very severe. It is causing me to have mental and physical problems and destroying my life. I have had this for 5 years and no doctors have been able to help me. I am not sure how much longer I can battle this beast. My next move is going to be trying to have my prostate removed which is expensive and my insurance won't cover it, but I don't know what else to do. I am in the Boston area which has some of the best doctors in the world but this illness doesn't seem to exist in the textbooks so no one knows what to do. Has anyone dealt with something similar or know anything about this type of thing?
Best Answer
Avatar universal
COMMUNITY LEADER
I'm wondering if you have eczema on the legs. The large blochy red rashes sound like it could be that instead of a fungus. I have eczema it came on all of a sudden and I can't get rid of it. I have it off and on. Eczema can be caused by irritants like a detergent or other things you became allergic to. Or scents, or also dry skin, allergy to dust mites , some say a autoimmune problem etc. The ones on your arm could be ring worm or could be part of an autoimmune issue or an allergy or perhaps a fungus. You need to think outside the box here. If you had it in your blood you wouldn't be alive by now. It is that serious. Even in the tissue fungal infections are very serious when they are deep.

So if you are healthy otherwise but itch terribly that sounds like eczema. I have it and I controlled over time. Take a look at photos of eczema on line. Try Mayo clinic and some others sites. See if any of those such as atopic eczema or any type looks like yours. Send me the link if find anything that looks similar. I'll be glad to take a look. For eczema You have to change your detergent to fragrance free and soap the same thing. You have to track down or keep a diary of what triggers it. It takes a while. I have mine under control after years of suffering. I use non scented soap and for my hands Cetaphil cleanser or for the whole body or dove soap for the body and Cetaphil Restoraderm for my legs as a moisturizer after a shower. For my hands I use Eucerin Intensive Repair Hand Cream. If I get a break out now I use a prescription steroid ointment but only a tiny bit because the cells get used to it and you need more and more.

So, it is worth a try. But I would see if you can make a diary and see what you are doing and using and if there is anything that is irritating or making your problem worse. If you stop using certain soaps on your body does it get better. You doctor may let you try a steroid ointment. If it is a fungus it will get worse if not it will get better. The OTC ones won't work. They are not strong enough.

You really should get one of the doctors perhaps the one that agreed that it looked like a fungus to do a skin scraping and do a fungal smear or culture. It would help a lot to see if there were any fungal spores or anything like that. I suspect it is something else or the fungal remedies would have done something. I do understand that a lot of fungi are becoming resistant but I do thing if it was a dermatophyte (tinea)  or ringworm as you say they would have responded to the drugs you mentioned.
mkh9
25 Responses
Sort by: Helpful Oldest Newest
Avatar universal
What's your thoughts on hsv? I have been having the same issues!
Helpful - 0
Avatar universal
Ive seen all kinds of doctors. The rashes are all over my body. They range from patchy brown and white discolorations on my temples to round rinqworm looking rashes on my forearms to typical large blotchey purple and red rashes on my thighs. a rash will last a few months fade out and then a new one will appear somewhere else. The large ones on my thighs itch and the others do not. They all look like tinea, do you know of any similar fungus' they might be? I went to a dermatologist, she said fungal but couldn't say which type.
Helpful - 0
Avatar universal
COMMUNITY LEADER
What kind of doctors have you seen? Maybe changing the type of doctor would help you get a culture done. They really shouldn't be giving you all those harsh anti-fungals without culture. It is not helping the problem obviously. They are very hard on the liver. Some fungi can look very similar to others. Does it itch? Does it have a color? What parts of the skin is it on? I wonder if a dermatologist would help rather than infectious disease or vice versa. Can you send a photo on here?
I am not a doctor, I am a microbiologist, but  I am trying to direct you get the right help. I do understand what you are saying.
mkh9
Helpful - 0
Avatar universal
Well I am not self medicating. I don't know that it is in my blood but it is clearly much worse than superficial and is beneath the surface. I suffer from weird zapping and pain amongst many other symptoms that are definitely related to it and I've been told by doctors that the rashes are fungal and look like tinea. The doctors were willing to give me the medications but all in all have not been much help. I apparently have some rare thing because everyone says what you are saying but I have been dealing with this for 5 years and know I am right, I am pretty sure it is not candida but similar. You may be right, it may not be tinea, but the rashes look very similar.
Helpful - 0
Avatar universal
COMMUNITY LEADER
How do you know it is in your blood if you haven't had any tests? Generally a fungus in the blood has a high mortality rate and by now you would be severely ill if that was the case. So I am wondering how you know you have the fungus in these areas without testing? Why do you think it is a dermatophyte versus some other fungi that can look similar? Who gave you the anti fungal medicines?

I hope you are not self medicating. Dermatophytes eat the keratin in the nails, hair and skin and don't live or eat the tissue or are not invasive. So I am thinking if you do have a fungus it may be a type that is similar but not a dermatopyte. That is why I am trying to get to the bottom of this. Also, to make you understand what is going on.

mkh9
Helpful - 0
Avatar universal
Hi, thanks for the reply. Yeah I read that dermatophytes are superficial but it is definitely in my bloodstream or tissue and the rashes look like tinea, so I don't know what to think. I have taken antifungal antibiotics ; Diflucan, Itraconzole, Ketaconazol and Terbinafine, none of them have gotten rid of it. I haven't had any tests, no doctors would do any. I am starting to think this is permanent.
Helpful - 0
2 Comments
I don't think it is systemic. You would be extremely ill, with a high fever and bedridden. So, it may be something other than a fungus. You should see a dermatologist. Hopefully they can tell you what it is. Or an infectious disease doctor. I would try the dermatologist first. Dermatophytes live on hair skin an nails. They require the keratin in those areas.
mkh9
I don't think it is systemic. You would be extremely ill, with a high fever and bedridden. So, it may be something other than a fungus. You should see a dermatologist. Hopefully they can tell you what it is. Or an infectious disease doctor. I would try the dermatologist first. Dermatophytes live on hair skin an nails. They require the keratin in those areas.
mkh9
Have an Answer?

You are reading content posted in the Infectious Diseases Community

Top Infectious Diseases Answerers
Avatar universal
CA
Learn About Top Answerers
Didn't find the answer you were looking for?
Ask a question
Popular Resources
Fearing autism, many parents aren't vaccinating their kids. Can doctors reverse this dangerous trend?
Can HIV be transmitted through this sexual activity? Dr. Jose Gonzalez-Garcia answers this commonly-asked question.
A breakthrough study discovers how to reduce risk of HIV transmission by 95 percent.
Dr. Jose Gonzalez-Garcia provides insight to the most commonly asked question about the transfer of HIV between partners.
Before your drop a dime at the pharmacy, find out if these popular cold and flu home remedies are a wonder or a waste
Fend off colds and the flu with these disease-fighting foods