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Query: UMLS:C0033774 (pruritus)
14,546 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

With the advent of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART), life-threatening opportunistic infection has become less common in patients with HIV infection and longevity has increased dramatically. With increased longevity, the problems of living with a chronic disease have become more prominent in this patient population. Disorders such as fat redistribution and metabolic abnormalities can result from antiviral medications and from HIV disease itself. Pruritus is one of the most common symptoms encountered in patients with HIV. The spectrum of skin diseases in such patients encompasses dermatoses of diverse etiologies; a few are peculiar to patients with HIV while others are not. Some of these conditions may cause severe and sometimes intractable pruritus that provokes scratching, picking, disfigurement, sleep loss, and significant psychological stress. Moreover, the expense of ongoing medical treatments can be daunting. Skin rash can sometimes be the initial presentation of HIV infection or serve as a harbinger of disease progression. Causes of pruritus include skin infections, infestations, papulosquamous disorders, photodermatitis, xerosis, drug reactions, and occasionally lymphoproliferative disorders. Drug eruptions are particularly common in patients who are HIV positive, presumably as a result of immune dysregulation, altered drug metabolism, and polypharmacy. Itching can also result from systemic diseases such as chronic renal failure, liver disease, or systemic lymphoma. Workup of pruritus should include a careful examination of the skin, hair, nails, and mucous membranes to establish a primary dermatologic diagnosis. If no dermatologic cause is found, a systemic cause or medication-related etiology should be sought. Idiopathic HIV pruritus is a diagnosis of exclusion and should only be considered when a specific diagnosis cannot be established. The management of HIV-associated pruritus should be directed at the underlying condition. Phototherapy has been found to be useful in the treatment of several HIV-associated dermatoses and idiopathic pruritus as well. Unfortunately, some of the treatments that have been suggested for patients with HIV are anecdotal or based on small uncontrolled studies. The last decade has seen a surge in the utilization of HAART which, to some degree, reconstitutes the immune system and ameliorates some dermatologic diseases. On the other hand, some skin diseases flare temporarily when HAART is started. Unless frank drug allergy is suspected, HAART does not need to be stopped.
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PMID:HIV-associated pruritus: etiology and management. 1262 93

The prevalence of pruritus varies from 60% to 90% in patients receiving hemodialysis. The aim to this study was to evaluate the frequency of pruritus and its characteristics among moroccan patients receiving hemodialysis. Pruritus related to primary skin disease or other identified cause than chronic renal failure was excluded. Biological parameters were compared between patients with pruritus and those without. Pruritus occurred in 74.4% of hemodialysis patients and concerned 66 men and 68 women, mean age 44.8 + 14 years. Duration of hemodialysis varied between 5 months to 10 years. Main characteristics of pruritus were a general pattern in 70%, moderate intensity in 50%, appearance after dialysis in 81.2% and severe psychologic repercussion in 20.8%. Antihistamines first-line treatment was rarely effective. UVB radiation used in 7 cases leaded to a marked improvement. This study underlined the high frequency of pruritus in moroccan patients with chronic renal failure on maintenance hemodialysis. Hemodialysis can initiate this symptom as well as improve it. Biological parameters were not different between patients with or without pruritus. It also pointed out on therapeutic challenges. However, UVB radiation seems to be an effective therapy in intractable itching as well as increased frequency of weekly courses of hemodialysis. Long term skin hydratation should be also highly recommended.
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PMID:[Hemodialysis-related pruritus. A study of 134 Moroccans ]. 1281 59

Although secondary hyperparathyroidism is improved by pharmacological therapy; 10-30% of patients with chronic renal failure undergo parathyroidectomy. The authors report on their experience with 66 cases of secondary hyperparathyroidism surgically treated over the period from January 1991 to December 2002. The surgical indications included: persistent hypercalcaemia, osteodystrophy with bone fractures, joint pain, itching and ectopic calcifications. The median preoperative parathyroid hormone level was 400 pg/ml. The operations performed were: subtotal parathyroidectomy (PTX 7/8) in 43 cases; total parathyroidectomy with autotransplantation (PTXt + At) in 13 cases; total parathyroidectomy (PTXt) alone in 6 cases and incomplete parathyroidectomy (PTXi) in 4 cases. The immediate results were satisfactory in each group. Calcium levels reverted to normal 24-48 hours postoperatively in 37 patients with PTX 7/8, in 11 patients with PTXt + At, in 5 patients with PTXt; 4 patients with PTXi showed a reduction, but no normalization, of calcium levels. Almost all patients, except those undergoing PTXi, showed an acceptable reduction in PTH levels in 25-35 days. Secondary hyperparathyroidism relapsed in 3 cases with PTXt + At and in 2 cases with PTX 7/8, while it proved persistent in 50% of patients with PTXi and in 7% of patients with PTX 7/8. Patients with PTXt mainly showed a substantial reduction of calcium levels. Parathyroidectomy is indispensable for the treatment of secondary hyper-parathyroidism. In our opinion, PTX 7/8 is the surgical treatment of choice because it is the easiest technique to perform and has the lowest relapse rate.
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PMID:[Indications and efficacy of parathyroidectomy in the treatment of secondary hyperparathyroidism in patients with chronic renal failure: our experience]. 1503 47

Acquired perforating dermatosis (APD) is a skin disorder occurring in the patients with chronic renal failure (CRF), diabetes mellitus (DM) or both. The purpose of this study was to clarify the clinical and histopathological features of APD, and evaluate role of scratching in the pathogenesis of APD. Twelve patients with APD associated with CRF and DM were enrolled in the study. In six patients who required hemodialysis, the lesions appeared 2-5 yr (mean 3 yr) after the initiation of dialysis, 18-22 yr (mean 19.3 yr) after the occurrence of DM. The other patients who did not receive hemodialysis noted the lesions 4-17 yr (mean 9.5 yr) after the onset of DM. All patients had an eruption of generally pruritic keratotic papules and nodules, primarily on the extensor surface of the extremities and the trunk. The histologic features of our cases showed a crateriform invagination of the epidermis filled by a parakeratotic plug and basophilic cellular debris. The period of treatment for patients who suffered from severe (7 cases) or very severe (3 cases) on the pruritus intensity was longer than that of patients who had mild pruritus (2 cases). These data showed that scratching appear to play a critical part in the pathogenesis of APD.
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PMID:Acquired perforating dermatosis in patients with chronic renal failure and diabetes mellitus. 1508 4

Pruritus, secondary to chronic renal failure, can be an extremely distressing symptom. A 15-year-old girl, in end-stage renal disease, presented with pruritus that did not improve on starting peritoneal dialysis. Despite normalising the calcium, phosphate and parathyroid levels, pruritus worsened and showed no response to antihistamines. She was commenced on ondansetron and showed dramatic improvement. Severe uraemic pruritus is rare, but distressing in children and can improve with ondansetron.
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PMID:Ondansetron for paediatric uraemic pruritus: a case report. 1508 22

Acquired perforating dermatosis is difficult to treat. We describe effective therapy of acquired perforating dermatosis with narrowband UVB in 5 patients. Phototherapy was given 2 or 3 times weekly. The dose was started at 400 mJ/cm(2) and increased to a maximum of 1500 mJ/cm(2). All lesions disappeared completely after 10 to 15 exposures without adverse effects. Two patients with diabetes mellitus but without chronic renal failure experienced no recurrence until 5 and 10 months after stopping the phototherapy. One patient undergoing hemodialysis for chronic renal failure experienced a recurrence of pruritus and small papules after 1 month. Two patients undergoing hemodialysis showed no recurrence during narrowband UVB maintenance therapy until 7 and 8 months.
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PMID:Treatment of acquired perforating dermatosis with narrowband ultraviolet B. 1569 89

Chronic renal failure (CRF) is a polymorphic disease whose management need frequently multiple drugs administration and multidisciplinary approach. Thirteen years after the beginning of haemodialysis treatment in Senegal, we aimed to evaluate the management of chronic renal failure in Dakar University Hospital Internal Medicine Department. We analysed retrospectively 243 CRF in patients managed during the last three years in this department. Most of these patients (43.6%) were under 46 years old. The sex ratio (M/F) was 1.31. The clinical symptoms were distributed as follow: high blood pressure (85.6%), anorexia (61.73%), anaemia (83.9%) and pruritus (12.3%). More than one third (37.04%) of patients had a clearance of creatinine under 10 ml/mn, at the diagnosis, and therefore required chronic haemodialysis. Only 8.23% of cases had the opportunity to get a medical treatment. Five machines ware available at this unity). The deficience of dialysis and nephrology personal is obvious in our practice. The majority of CRF patients can not afford the treatment cost. Therefore, medical training, prevention and screening of renal diseases seem to be the best way to solve this public health problem in developing countries.
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PMID:[Chronical renal failure in one Dakar Hospital Department]. 1577 28

We'll report 2 dialysis cases which came to our clinic for the symptoms caused by hypercalcemia. Patients complained of sleeplessness, itching, headache, palpitation, apathy, akinesis, leanness, foot gangrene and so on. Hypercalcemia is one of the complication of vitamin D and calcium carbonate administration in chronic renal failure, though the frequency and risk are not clearly documented. Hypercalcemia aggravates the outcome of patients on dialysis and contributes to vascular calcification in long term. Recently various factors involving cardiovascular calcification are discussed, but first of all we must be very careful for the symptoms of hypercalcemia, and careful monitoring of plasma calcium concentration are recommended.
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PMID:[2 dialysis cases which came to our clinic for the symptoms caused by hypercalcemia]. 1627 38

Ultraviolet-based therapy has been used to treat various pruritic conditions including pruritus in chronic renal failure, atopic dermatitis, HIV, aquagenic pruritus and urticaria, solar, chronic, and idiopathic urticaria, urticaria pigmentosa, polycythemia vera, pruritic folliculitis of pregnancy, breast carcinoma skin infiltration, Hodgkin's lymphoma, chronic liver disease, and acquired perforating dermatosis, among others. Various mechanisms of action for phototherapy have been posited. Treatment limitations, side effects, and common dosing protocols are reviewed.
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PMID:Ultraviolet phototherapy for pruritus. 1629 8

Various metabolic events may lead to dermatologic pathology. Three illustrative examples are glucagonoma syndrome, uremic pruritus, and zinc deficiency. The glucagonoma syndrome, resulting from a glucagon secreting-tumor, is characterized by a distinctive dermatitis, necrolytic migratory erythema. This skin rash is a generalized, pruritic eruption which first appears as erythematous patches, then progresses to form superficial vesicles and bullae. Uremic pruritus is a clinical phenomenon seen in patients with chronic renal failure; it provokes vigorous scratching and may lead to numerous cutaneous lesions including extensive excoriations, lichen simplex chronicus, prurigo nodularis, keratotic papules, or secondary impetigo. Zinc deficiency may be evident as an inherited disease called acrodermatitis enteropathica, which presents clinically with a predominately acral and periorificial rash of sharply demarcated erythematous, exfoliative, and exudative patches. It may also result from an acquired defect with similar clinical findings. A brief review concerning the etiology, clinical manifestations, diagnosis, and treatment are given for glucagonoma syndrome, uremic pruritus, and zinc deficiency. Any pathophysiologic dysfunction that results in a loss of metabolic control of homeostasis in the body may demonstrate cutaneous manifestations. These skin findings may be of great clinical significance and may aid in the diagnosis or even be the first sign of a disease process. The glucagonoma syndrome, uremic pruritus, and zinc deficiency are three examples of dermatologic correlates of metabolic events.
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PMID:Dermatologic correlates of selected metabolic events. 1731 68


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