Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0033774 (pruritus)
14,546 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

5-methoxypsoralen (5-MOP) is considered an alternative to 8-methoxypsoralen (8-MOP) for photochemotherapy of psoriasis. We have compared the clinical efficacy and tolerability of 5-MOP (1.2 mg/kg)-UVA versus 8-MOP (0.6 mg/kg)-UVA therapy in 25 patients of skin type III and IV, affected by relapsing plaque-type psoriasis of similar body involvement; indeed, the same patients were given 8-MOP during 1 year and 5-MOP during the subsequent year after relapsing. Both treatments cleared psoriatic lesions with a comparable number of exposures, but 5-MOP required significantly higher cumulative UVA doses. The difference was due to the lower phototoxicity of 5-MOP, as assessed by the determination of the minimal phototoxic dose, and to its higher tanning activity, as assessed by the weekly grading of pigmentation. Nevertheless, therapy by 5-MOP-UVA seemed particularly interesting in that it showed a higher tolerability since only 1 patient experienced nausea, whereas during therapy with 8-MOP-UVA nausea and/or vomiting occurred in 7 patients, sunburn in 6 and itching in 3. Since we have treated the same patients with the two drugs, our results were not influenced by interindividual variations of phototoxic responses, tanning ability and susceptibility to develop psoralen-induced short-term side-effects. It was concluded that, although long-term side-effects of the 5-MOP-UVA treatment have still to be determined, such treatment of psoriasis should be reappraised due to its higher tolerability in comparison to 8-MOP-UVA treatment.
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PMID:A reappraisal of the use of 5-methoxypsoralen in the therapy of psoriasis. 136 9

In a double-blind left-right randomised comparison, 27 patients suffering from chronic plaque-type psoriasis vulgaris were treated for one minute with dithranol 2% ointment, Psoralon (Psoralon MT), on a selected psoriasis plaque on one half of the body and with a placebo ointment on a corresponding plaque on the other. The preparations were applied once daily for 8 weeks. Seventeen patients achieved clearing or considerable improvement with dithranol therapy, as compared with 6 patients with placebo (p = 0.002). Erythema, infiltration, scaling, pruritus and the overall result were assessed. Statistically significant differences in favour of dithranol treatment were seen for all five variables, except for pruritus. The average of these five variables, designated the mean score, was also analysed; dithranol was seen to yield significantly better results (p = 0.001). Staining of clothes and the bathroom was noted by 3 and 5 patients, respectively, but no medical side effects were seen.
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PMID:One-minute dithranol therapy in psoriasis: a placebo-controlled paired comparative study. 136 41

Omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids compete with arachidonic acid as substrates for lipoperoxidases, which transform them into leukotrienes with low biological activity. As this process, in skin, may benefit psoriatic patients, a randomized controlled single blind-study was carried out on a sample of 25 patients. In the study fish oil (FO) was compared with liquid paraffin (LP); both were topically applied and administered daily for 6 h under an occlusive dressing over a 4-week period. Evaluations were performed weekly assessing erythema, scaling, plaque thickness (induration) and itching. The results showed statistically significant improvement in erythema and scaling for both treatments compared to basal values; significant differences between treatments were achieved in scaling but not in erythema. Compared to baseline, FO significantly improved plaque thickness while LP did not. After 4 weeks, FO proved to be significantly better than LP. All patients accepted the treatment despite its unpleasant smell. Irritation and a burning sensation were reported in the FO treated plaque of one patient. This adverse effect reverted after completing the treatment. These findings demonstrate that topical FO shows a better performance than LP under an occlusive dressing.
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PMID:Topical fish oil in psoriasis--a controlled and blind study. 145 Dec 89

The results of two studies are presented that reveal the efficacy and safety of 0.05% halobetasol ointment in the treatment of patients with plaque psoriasis of at least moderate severity. Both multicenter studies were randomized, double-blind, and vehicle controlled, and study medications were applied twice daily for 2 weeks. One study was a paired-comparison (PC); the other study was of parallel-group (PG) design. Both studies called for evaluations at entry (week 0) and after 1 and 2 weeks of treatment. The PC study enrolled 100 patients; the PG study enrolled 110 patients; 204 patients provided efficacy data over both studies. In the PC study, plaque elevation, erythema, and scaling, at least moderately severe at entry, showed at the end of treatment both statistical (p less than or equal to 0.0003) and clinical significance (all greater than 1-unit difference on the rating scale) favoring 0.05% halobetasol ointment over vehicle. Pruritus (initially mild) and total score also showed statistically significant treatment differences favoring halobetasol at the final evaluation. Patient global responses for "effectiveness" and "overall rating" favored 0.05% halobetasol ointment over vehicle. In the PG study, induration, erythema, and scaling, at least moderately severe at entry, showed at the end of treatment both statistically and clinically significant differences favoring 0.05% halobetasol ointment over vehicle. Physician's global evaluation favored 0.05% halobetasol ointment over vehicle after 2 weeks of use. No patients were released from either study because of adverse events. No systemic adverse events or findings of skin atrophy were reported in these studies. Reports of "stings" or "burns" were equally divided between halobetasol and its vehicle.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Evaluation of halobetasol propionate ointment in the treatment of plaque psoriasis: report on two double-blind, vehicle-controlled studies. 175 12

The efficacy and safety of halobetasol propionate 0.05% cream, an ultra high-potency corticosteroid preparation, was evaluated in a double-blind, vehicle-controlled, paired comparison study. Patients' psoriatic lesions were evaluated before treatment and after 1 and 2 weeks of twice-daily treatment with halobetasol propionate and vehicle. Response measures (plaque elevation, erythema, scaling, and pruritus) were evaluated with a 4-point severity scale whereby the sum provided a total score. Patient self-assessment measures were obtained at the 2-week visit by categorizing his or her global responses to queries about each treatment's "effectiveness" and "overall rating." All efficacy parameters, as judged by the physician, showed statistically significant (p = 0.0001) treatment differences favoring halobetasol propionate at both week 1 and week 2 evaluations. Patient global responses for "effectiveness" and "overall rating" favored halobetasol propionate 0.05% cream over vehicle after 2 weeks of use. No systemic adverse drug effects were reported during the study. No patient was discontinued from the study because of an adverse event, and there was no evidence of skin atrophy after 2 weeks of treatment with either agent. Patient reports of "stings" or "burns" were equally distributed between the active and vehicle treatment groups. This trial demonstrates that halobetasol propionate 0.05% cream is clinically beneficial and without evidence of significant risk in the treatment of plaque psoriasis.
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PMID:A double-blind, vehicle-controlled paired comparison of halobetasol propionate cream on patients with plaque psoriasis. 175 13

In a double-blind crossover study, oral papaverine hydrochloride in doses of 150-300 mg t.i.d. was compared to placebo as an adjunctive treatment of atopic dermatitis. Twenty patients completed both 2-week phases of the crossover during which time the physician's weekly evaluation included an estimate of percentage skin involvement with disease, global evaluation and the grading of the erythema, scale and lichenification of a representative plaque. The patients' evaluation included their assessment of the degree of pruritus, and an estimate of the percentage of the day pruritus was present as well as a global evaluation of disease. Papaverine demonstrated no statistically significant advantage over placebo for any of the parameters measured and was noted to cause transient asymptomatic liver function test abnormalities in 3 of the study patients.
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PMID:Papaverine hydrochloride in the treatment of atopic dermatitis: a double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover clinical trial to reassess safety and efficacy. 176 10

The effects on the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis of the ultra-high potency corticosteroid halobetasol in the treatment of psoriasis were evaluated in seven patients with extensive, long-standing plaque psoriasis. Each patient applied 3.5 g halobetasol 0.05% ointment in the morning and evening for 7 days. Morning plasma cortisol levels and 24-hour urinary excretion of 17-hydroxycorticosteroid were determined before and on the last 2 days of treatment; plasma cortisol levels were also determined 4 and 5 days after completion of therapy. Morning plasma cortisol concentrations did not decrease significantly during treatment, and no values were below the normal range. Mean 24-hour urinary 17-hydroxycorticosteroid excretion fell from 6.6 +/- 1.4 mg to 5.1 +/- 1.4 mg. Two patients had mild, localized pruritus and stinging with the initial ointment application. No other adverse cutaneous effects were observed. Halobetasol was also clinically efficacious over the 7 days of treatment, based on evaluation of pruritus, erythema, scaling, and plaque elevation. These results demonstrate no adverse effects of the drug on the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis at doses that are clinically effective in the management of plaque psoriasis.
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PMID:The safety of halobetasol 0.05% ointment in the treatment of psoriasis. 234 35

The limitations of conventional therapy for psoriasis are reviewed, and the pharmacology, pharmacokinetics, clinical efficacy, adverse effects, dosing and therapeutic monitoring of etretinate and other retinoids are described. Traditional treatments for psoriasis include topical application of anthralin and coal tar ointments; systemic therapy with corticosteroids or methotrexate; and systemic or methotrexate; and systemic psoralens combined with exposure to ultraviolet light (PUVA). The topical therapies are beneficial but aesthetically displeasing to patients; the systemic treatments are associated with severe adverse reactions. Etretinate provides another option in the treatment of psoriasis. Etretinate and acitretin, an investigational retinoid, appear to be effective oral therapies for severe variants of psoriasis, especially pustular psoriasis. Retinoids generally do not offer substantial therapeutic advantages over other treatments for chronic-plaque psoriasis. The most common adverse effects of etretinate are cheilitis, alopecia, desquamation of the skin, drying of mucous membranes, and pruritus. Use of low-dose etretinae in combination with other forms of therapy, such as corticosteroids or PUVA, may minimize the frequency of adverse effects. Etretinate is a known teratogen. Its elimination half-life is prolonged to 100-120 days with long-term use. Acitretin, the carboxylic acid derivative of etretinate, has a much shorter elimination half-life than etretinate (50 hours after multiple doses). Its adverse-effect profile is similar to that of etretinate. Etretinate and acitretin appear to be clinically effective for therapy of severe variants of psoriasis. Etretinate should not be used to treat mild psoriasis because of the high incidence of serious adverse effects.
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PMID:Use of retinoids in the treatment of psoriasis. 266 25

A series of 72 women with polymorphic light eruption (PLE) seen between 1970-1988 was reviewed with regard to onset of the disorder and timing of oral contraceptive use and pregnancy. PLE is a light-induced dermatosis consisting of itching erythematous papular, plaque-like or eczematous skin lesions on exposed skin. It occurs mainly in women--79% in this series. Appropriate tests were performed to rule out systemic lupus erythematosus and porphyria. The mean age of onset was 25 years. 63.9% had used oral contraceptives during their disease. PLE and pill use was correlated in 15.3% of patients. No consistent relationship was found between PLE episodes and starting or stopping pills. Eruptions developed in 3 women during pregnancy; they worsened during pregnancy in 2; and resolved during pregnancy in 1 woman.
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PMID:Polymorphic light eruption induced by oral contraceptives and pregnancy? 273 45

In November 1985, a 5-year-old Chinese girl presented to the Dermatological Department of Chang Gung Memorial Hospital, Taipei, having scaly erythematous plaque with mild itching on her right upper eyelid. Skin biopsy and fungal cultures were performed after failure of initial topical steroid therapy. The histopathology revealed many acute and chronic inflammatory cells infiltrating the dermis and H & E stain revealed some foamy vacuolated spores; P.A.S. and Gomori's methenamine stain also showed many spores and sporangia containing endospores. Lactophenol cotton blue and methylene blue wet mount preparations were made from the colony growing on Sabouraud's agar. Microscopically, these showed many round or oval spores and endospore-containing sporangia, corresponding with the histopathology. This microorganism grew as a milky white yeast-like colony on Sabouraud's dextrose agar, blood agar, EMB, Tween 80 cornmeal agar, chocolate agar, MacConkey agar and brain heart infusion with sheep RBC agar. On Pagano-Levin medium, the colony became deep red in color and in the thioglycollate broth tube culture, it was suspended on the upper layer as a whitish ring-form of granules. The microorganism showed no urease activity. In the assimilation tests, there were positive reactions to glucose, galactose, trehalose, fructose, mannose and glycerol, and negative reactions to maltose, xylose, raffinose, sucrose, lactose, cellabiose, n-propanol, etc. The electronmicroscopic examination of the colony revealed sporangium containing spores and characteristic dense body and plastids in the spores.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Cutaneous protothecosis: first case in Taiwan]. 280 69


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