Fungal infections of the skin are caused by dermatophyte fungi. Infections can be acute and inflammatory or chronic and non-inflammatory; it is believed that cell-mediated immunity is the cornerstone of host defence and is instrumental in the eradication of the infection. We describe here parameters of the immune response of a group of patients who although not immunocompromised, suffered from widespread and chronic infections. All patients lacked a specific delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) response; however, their in vitro lymphocyte proliferation in response to Trichophyton rubrum extract and to other fungal antigens was normal. The patients were not atopic by clinical history, and yet had high levels of non-specific IgE and of T. rubrum-specific IgG4. Taken together, the results of this study suggest that the group of patients studied suffered from an immune imbalance which has characteristics of a Th2-type response.