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Query: UMLS:C0033774 (
pruritus
)
14,546
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Atopic dermatitis forms an active area of basic and clinical research, where important new knowledge about genetics and immunopathogenesis has surfaced over the past years, and where simultaneous development of new and innovative therapies is under way. However, the inclusion of any patient in an atopic dermatitis study, whether it is on its genetics, pathogenesis or therapy, requires a diagnosis which is irrefutable. Since there is no simple and also no complicated laboratory procedure to reach a diagnosis of atopic dermatitis, different sets of clinical criteria have been developed for the purpose of making the diagnosis uniformly in different studies as well as in different study centers. The most commonly used are Hanifin and Rajka's set of diagnostic features, which have major and minor clinical criteria to be fulfilled in order to establish a diagnosis of atopic dermatitis. Recent developments in the immunology of atopy have clearly established the major abnormality in this syndrome, the preferential production of allergen-specific IgE. In this contribution, it is suggested that the presence of such antibodies in a given patient should be a mandatory criterium for the diagnosis of atopic dermatitis. Such a diagnostic test however establishes a diagnosis of atopic syndrome, not atopic dermatitis. Thus, for atopic dermatitis we have to rely, for the time being, on additional clinical criteria. The clinical features described in the literature are critically evaluated, and it is suggested that in addition to the mandatory presence of allergen-specific IgE, 2 of 3 principal criteria (
pruritus
, typical morphology and distribution, chronic or chronically relapsing) should be present for such a diagnosis. Finally, the minor features originally described by Hanifin and Rajka and later evaluated by others are revised and divided over 4 subcategories; a) related to subclinical eczema; b) related to
dry skin
; c) extra skin folds; and d) ophthalmological pathology. They are suggested to be used as additional criteria only, needed when clinical suspicion is high but the new mandatory and principal diagnostic criteria described here are inconclusive. For study purposes, we suggest that the mandatory and principal criteria are sufficient. They are now evaluated and validated in ongoing atopic dermatitis treatment studies.
...
PMID:The millennium criteria for the diagnosis of atopic dermatitis. 975 7
In the present study we investigated the prevalence of self-reported hand eczema as well as subjective associations between skin symptoms and composite/bonding or other dental materials among Swedish dentists. A questionnaire on skin symptoms, atopy, occupational experience, and other background factors was sent to a random sample (n=3,500) of all dentists licensed since 1965. This group corresponds to about half of the country's occupationally active dentists. The response rate was 88%. The questionnaire had previously been validated against clinical dermatological examination of subjects reporting hand eczema. The prevalence of dry and rough skin on the hands was high (45%). Hand eczema during the previous 12 months was reported by 13.5%.
Dry skin
and hand eczema were more common among dentists than in two age-matched general population samples investigated using identical questions. The difference versus the general population was most pronounced (about two-fold) among male dentists. A history of childhood eczema was the most important predictor for adult hand eczema, with a prevalence ratio of 2.4 compared to dentists without childhood eczema. Seven % reported skin symptoms when working with acrylic resins, and 15% had experienced rapid
itching
related to protective gloves.
...
PMID:Prevalence of self-reported hand eczema and skin symptoms associated with dental materials among Swedish dentists. 1062 10
This phase II study of liarozole fumarate (R85246, liarozole), a novel imidazole with retinomimetic and aromatase inhibitory effects, was designed to determine the efficacy and tolerability in postmenopausal women with advanced breast cancer in progression, to correlate these effects with hormonal levels, and to evaluate quality of life. Twenty-nine women with ER-positive or unknown metastatic disease who received > or = 2 prior hormonal therapies were treated with 150-300 mg liarozole twice daily until disease progression. All patients were evaluable for toxicity and 25 for response. Four patients (16.0%, 95% CI 5.3-37.4%) had partial remission (PR) of their disease for a median of 7.4 months (range 1.2-12.9) and 7 (28%) had disease stabilization for a median of 4.8 months (1.6-16.0). Estradiol decreased from pre-treatment levels of 9.2-52 pM (mean 17.1) to below detection (9.2 pM, p = 0.0005) after 1 month. Similarly estrone levels fell from 14-307 pM (mean 92.7) to below detection (9.2 pM, p = 0.0001). The most common toxicity was dermatological (96.6%) with features compatible with hypervitaminosis A syndrome such as rash,
pruritus
,
dry skin
, and brittle nails. The majority of these were mild to moderate in severity. No significant improvement in quality of life scores (FLI-C) were noted. Liarozole is an active new treatment for breast cancer in patients heavily pre-treated with hormone therapies. Further studies are needed to confirm its relative efficacy in both receptor positive and negative postmenopausal breast cancer.
...
PMID:Liarozole fumarate (R85246): a novel imidazole in the treatment of receptor positive postmenopausal metastatic breast cancer. 1075 80
During the past decade, there has been an increasing problem with acrylate allergy and natural rubber latex (NRL) allergy among dental personnel. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the prevalence of these problems among dentists, dental nurses and dental hygienists in Uppsala county, Sweden. The study was based on a self-administered questionnaire sent to 690 persons with 527 responders (76%). The most common skin problem was
dry skin
, fissures and/or
itching
on the hands. Of the 72 persons (13.6%) reporting to have suffered from hand eczema during the past 12 months, 41 were patch tested with the TRUE Test standard series and the Swedish dental screening series. In the patch tested group, 9.8% reacted to 1 or more of the acrylates. In addition, 389 persons were tested for NRL allergy with the Pharmacia Upjohn CAP-RAST test, and of these, we found 7.2% to be positive. The prevalence of self-reported hand eczema and the number of positive CAP-RAST tests differed between the 3 occupations, with higher figures for the dentists. There was also a correlation between atopic eczema and hand eczema. Of those reporting skin symptoms, 67.7% connected them to the place of work and 28.8% related them to the use of gloves.
...
PMID:The use of protective gloves and the prevalence of hand eczema, skin complaints and allergy to natural rubber latex among dental personnel in the county of Uppsala, Sweden. 1090 81
Eflornithine HCl 13.9% cream (Vaniqa) is a novel treatment for the management of unwanted facial hair in women. This paper reports the results of four modified open-label, within-subject vehicle-controlled studies evaluating the dermal safety of this topical treatment. In a repeated insult patch test (230 subjects), erythema with oedema occurred in 38.9% of subjects treated with eflornithine HCl 13.9% cream and 4.8% of subjects treated with vehicle cream. Challenge applications at previously untested sites following the three-week induction period produced noticeable erythema or greater on only four sites treated with eflornithine HCl 13.9% cream and one vehicle-treated site. The erythema at these sites subsided substantially within 24 hours. In a three-week cumulative irritation study (30 subjects), the mean irritation score for sites treated with eflornithine HCl 13.9% cream was 1.33, compared with 0.76 at vehicle-treated sites and 3.09 at positive-control (sodium lauryl sulphate-treated) sites (p < 0.001 between all three groups). In a phototoxicity study (25 subjects), irradiated sites showed either no reaction (40% of both sites treated with eflornithine HCl 13.9% cream and vehicle-treated sites), or mild erythema subsiding in all cases but one within 24 hours. No reaction was seen at non-irradiated sites. In a photocontact allergy study (30 subjects), challenge with eflornithine HCl 13.9% cream or its vehicle alone produced either no reaction or mild erythema subsiding within 24 hours at both irradiated and non-irradiated sites. No serious adverse events were reported during the studies, and the only adverse events considered related to treatment were
pruritus
(three subjects) and
dry skin
at test site (one subject). These results demonstrate that eflornithine HCl 13.9% cream does not have contact sensitising, photocontact allergic or phototoxic properties. It can cause irritation under exaggerated conditions of use. Eflornithine HCl 13.9% cream, therefore, has a favourable dermal safety profile appropriate for a topical treatment to be applied routinely.
...
PMID:Human dermal safety studies with eflornithine HCl 13.9% cream (Vaniqa), a novel treatment for excessive facial hair. 1126 7
Itching
is a common complaint among patients infected with HIV and may cause significant morbidity and embarrassment. Although idiopathic HIV-
pruritus
has been described, it is probably less common than was previously thought. In most patients, a careful history and physical examination will show that a dermatosis accounts for their
pruritus
.
Dry skin
, seborrheic dermatitis, eczema, psoriasis, pruritic papular eruption, staphylococcal folliculitis and prurigo nodularis are frequently encountered in these patients. These common dermatoses, drug eruptions, several rarer conditions and systemic causes of
itching
should be excluded before diagnosing idiopathic HIV-
pruritus
. Treatment should be directed to the underlying skin problem and may be supplemented with sedating antihistamines. Phototherapy is a safe and effective therapeutic modality for many pruritic dermatoses as well as for idiopathic
pruritus
.
...
PMID:Evaluation and treatment of itching in HIV-infected patients. 1151 17
The present study was conducted to establish a new mouse model of
dry skin
pruritus
. The rostral back was treated daily with cutaneous application of acetone/ether (1:1) mixture (AE), water following AE (AEW), 1% sodium lauryl sulfate (SLS) or tape stripping (TS). On the day after 5-day treatment, although all four treatments significantly decreased stratum corneum (SC) hydration and increased transepidermal water loss (TEWL), only AEW treatment significantly increased spontaneous scratching. An increase in the frequency of TS produced the marked increase of TEWL, without significant effects on SC hydration and spontaneous scratching. In AEW-treated mice, changes in SC hydration and TEWL were marked in the initial 2-day period, while spontaneous scratching increased gradually from 3 days after starting the treatment. The degranulation of cutaneous mast cells was increased by SLS treatment but not by other treatments. There was no apparent difference in AEW-induced spontaneous scratching between mast cell-deficient mice (WBB6F1-W/Wv) and normal littermates (WBB6F1-+/+). Opioid antagonists, naloxone and naltrexone, (1 mg/kg, subcutaneously) significantly suppressed spontaneous scratching in AEW-treated mice. It is suggested that spontaneous scratching of AEW-treated mice is an
itch
-related response and a useful model for studying the mechanisms of
dry skin
pruritus
.
...
PMID:Itch-associated response induced by experimental dry skin in mice. 1194 83
Moisturizing creams have beneficial effects in the treatment of dry, scaly skin, but they may induce adverse skin reactions. In a randomized double-blind study, 197 patients with atopic dermatitis were treated with one of the following: a new moisturizing cream with 20% glycerin, its cream base without glycerin as placebo, or a cream with 4% urea and 4% sodium chloride. The patients were asked to apply the cream at least once daily for 30 days. Adverse skin reactions and changes in skin dryness were assessed by the patient and a dermatologist. Adverse skin reactions such as smarting (a sharp local superficial sensation) were felt significantly less among patients using the 20% glycerin cream compared with the urea-saline cream, because 10% of the patients judged the smarting as severe or moderate when using glycerin cream, whereas 24% did so using urea-saline cream (p < 0.0006). No differences were found regarding skin reactions such as stinging,
itching
and dryness/irritation. The study showed equal effects on skin dryness as judged by the patients and the dermatologist. In conclusion, a glycerin containing cream appears to be a suitable alternative to urea/sodium chloride in the treatment of atopic
dry skin
.
...
PMID:A double-blind study comparing the effect of glycerin and urea on dry, eczematous skin in atopic patients. 1201 98
Atopic dermatitis (AD) is a chronic,
itching
, inflammatory skin disease which is associated with asthma and/or hay fever and a familial occurrence of these conditions. Genetic factors are important in the development of AD, but the exact hereditary pathway is still unknown.
Dry skin
and the weakened barrier function in patients with AD is very important for the patient's reactions to irritants and other external trigger factors including microorganisms. The standard treatments are topical corticosteroids, topical immunomodulating agents, and emollients. If AD cannot be controlled by this type of treatment, systemic immunomodulating agents may be used. UVB, UVA, or psoralen-UVA may also be used for widespread severe lesions. However, some patients do not respond to these standard treatment, and then it is important to consider the role of microorganisms, house dust mites or food. The role of the Malassezia yeasts in AD, especially AD located to the head and neck region, is now documented in several papers. There are also several papers indicating the role of Candida as an aggravating factor in AD. Patients with AD also develop chronic dermatophyte infections more easily, and patients with AD and chronic dermatophyte infections may show improvement in their AD when treated with antifungal drugs.
...
PMID:Atopic dermatitis and fungi. 1236 69
Uremic
pruritus
is one of the most bothersome symptoms in patients with chronic renal failure. Its pathogenesis remains unclear. The aim of this study was to evaluate the frequency of uremic
pruritus
in hemodialysis patients and to correlate its presence and intensity with several clinical parameters. One hundred thirty patients on maintenance hemodialysis were included into the study. The intensity of
pruritus
was assessed by two methods: visual analog scale and specially adapted questionnaire scoring method. A significantly positive correlation (p < 0.00001) was demonstrated between the two methods for evaluating
pruritus
. Uremic
pruritus
was found in 40.8% of patients. An additional 36.1% of patients reported
pruritus
to have been present in the past during the renal disease period.
Itching
was generalized in 19% of patients; the remaining subjects suffered from scattered
pruritus
(50%) or
pruritus
in a single location (31%). A significant positive relationship (p < 0.02) was demonstrated between the total score of
pruritus
and duration of the hemodialysis period. Severity of
pruritus
and sleep disturbance caused by
itching
also significantly correlated (p < 0.05) with the duration of hemodialysis. Patients hemodialysed on polysulphone membranes more commonly suffered from
pruritus
than those on hemophane (p < 0.04) or cuprophane (p < 0.03) dialysis membranes. A marked relationship was demonstrated between the intensity of xerosis and prevalence of
pruritus
. Significantly more patients with very rough skin had
pruritus
compared to those with rough skin (p < 0.05) and those with slightly
dry skin
(p < 0.02).
Itching
was more common in female patients (p < 0.04), but patient age, underlying renal disease and erythropoietin intake did not correlate with the incidence or intensity of
pruritus
.
...
PMID:Uremic pruritus: a clinical study of maintenance hemodialysis patients. 1243 92
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