Frontiers in Environmental Health (Mar 2024)

The association between interdigital pilonidal sinus and animal groomers is a historical narrative correlation and not a true occupational hazard

  • Hamdi Al Shenawi,
  • Rami Yaghan,
  • Rami Yaghan,
  • Suhair Al Saad,
  • Ziyad M. Binayfan,
  • Yaqoob Y. Mohamed,
  • Mansour M. Alnasser,
  • Fatima Al Shenawi,
  • Lamees Yaghan,
  • Amer Almarabheh,
  • Abdulrahman Alshammari,
  • Noor Al Shenawi,
  • Yahya M. Naguib,
  • Yahya M. Naguib

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fenvh.2024.1349268
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3

Abstract

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IntroductionPilonidal sinus (PNS) is a small hole or “tunnel” in the skin that frequently occurs in the sacrococcygeal region. Nevertheless, PNS has been reported to occur between the fingers (interdigital) in barbers, hairdressers, and animal groomers. The aim of this study was to estimate the prevalence of interdigital PNS among animal handlers in Bahrain and to treat any patients encountered.MethodsThis is a cross-sectional study with convenience sampling from November 2020 to October 2021. The study participants were animal handlers from stables, veterinary, and pet shops in Bahrain. There were 43 males and 7 females with direct animal contact. 86% of the study population were handling horses, and 15% were handling different types of animals.ResultsNo positive cases of interdigital PNS among participants were found, this might reflect the positive impact of good personal hygiene among our study population. Our study shows that groomers in Bahrain frequently wash their hands after handling animals, and 98% have a daily habit of bathing after work. It was also estimated that 60% of the participants use gloves to handle animals themselves or their waste.DiscussionThis could be the first study looking at the prevalence of interdigital PNS in animal groomers worldwide. The absence of any case report of interdigital PNS among animal groomers in the recent literature strengthens our assumption that the association between interdigital PNS and hair grooming could be a narrative coincidence rather than a true occupational hazard. The present work may help in better understanding of occupation-disease association, and highlights the importance of mass screening of animal handlers for occupation-dependent health problems.

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