Tinea capitis geomantic omen

Tinea capitis, or tinea capitis, is clinically divided into four types: favus, tinea alba, tinea nigrum and tinea suppuratum. It mainly happens in children, because the sebaceous glands of children's scalp are not well secreted, and adults rarely get tinea capitis. But now some adults have tinea capitis, mainly due to the clinical application of immunosuppressants and hormones, coupled with pets, cats and dogs, leading to the spread of fungi through the skin, including tinea capitis. Tinea capitis is mainly favus, tinea alba, tinea nigrum and pyogenic tinea, which is a special type of tinea alba and tinea nigrum. Tinea alba is a gray-white scaly spot on the head, which often leads to hair loss. It's high-grade broken hair. When the hair grows to 3-4mm, it will break, and then there will be mother and child spots, and it will be fine after puberty. Tinea versicolor is a low-cut hair that breaks as soon as it comes out. Tinea, pustules and pyonephrosis can leave permanent cicatricial alopecia.