Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0851184 (thinning)
11,252 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Inhaled corticosteroids are considered by many to be the therapy of choice in the treatment of asthma and allergic rhinitis. Systemic adverse effects are well known and are mainly dose dependent. Adverse cutaneous effects have also been characterized. Some of them are frequent and dose dependent, for example thinning of the skin and easy bruising. These adverse effects are probably present in about half of the patients treated with inhaled corticosteroids. The risk of these adverse effects is more important among elderly people and increases with the duration of the treatment and the daily dosage. Thinning of the skin and easy bruising are probably dependent on collagen synthesis modifications. Among rare or underestimated reactions, several adverse effects have been described such as angina bullosa hemorrhagica, acne and allergy. In this latter case, the attention should be paid to relevant clinical signs such as eczematous lesions of the face and aggravation of the nasal symptoms. Mucocutaneous infections related to inhaled corticosteroid use have also been reported, the most frequent being candidiasis. However, the frequency of symptomatic clinical infection is very rare. The risk of viral infection, especially with a herpes virus, has never been described. As cutaneous complications of corticosteroids are mainly dose dependent, these adverse effects could be prevented by attention to the daily dosage. Infection could be prevented by rising the mouth after inhalation and the use of a spacer device. If cutaneous adverse effects occur despite proper use of the inhaled corticosteroids and became unpleasant for the patient, discussion with a pneumologist or otorhinolaryngologist may be required but temporary halting therapy is rarely useful.
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PMID:Skin reactions to inhaled corticosteroids. Clinical aspects, incidence, avoidance, and management. 1170 9

Inhaled corticosteroids are considered to be the therapy of choice in the treatment of asthma and allergic rhinitis. However, various cutaneous adverse reactions have been described and are probably present in approximately half of patients. Some of these reactions are related to the daily dosage of steroids or the duration of treatment, for example: thinning of the skin, easy bruising, acne or peri-oral dermatitis, mucocutaneous infection and, especially, candidiasis. Other cutaneous side effects are independent of the dose, such as allergic reactions and a few other rare side effects. Adverse effects could be prevented by monitoring the daily dosage and the family history of the patients, and by following advice provided on the use of inhaled corticosteroids. Specific treatments for infection, acne or allergy can cure these side effects. However, cutaneous side effects can become unpleasant for the patient and temporarily withdrawing therapy has proven to be extremely effective.
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PMID:Adverse skin reactions to inhaled corticosteroids. 1290 32

A 77-year-old woman born in the Dominican Republic presented with fullness of the glabella and medial eyebrows for 1 year followed by alopecia of the lateral eyebrows and frontal hairline. She stated that although she had a high hairline at baseline, it had receded in the past year. She had also noted central scalp hair thinning that started 6 years earlier. She denied all styling practices that used traction or chemical processes, although she admitted to hair dye and blow dryer use. She reported "acne" in the central face for decades and darkening of the skin on the lateral face for several years. Her medical history included hypertension, hyperlipidemia, hypothyroidism, benign paroxysmal positional vertigo, and treated breast ductal hyperplasia. Her medications were metoprolol, amlodipine, aspirin, levothyroxine, omeprazole, pravastatin, and meclizine; she denied starting any new medications within the past 2 years. Her family history was notable for androgenic pattern alopecia in a brother and a high hairline in her father. Review of systems was negative except for knee arthralgias and seasonal allergic rhinitis.
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PMID:Four Diseases, Two Associations, One Patient: A Case of Frontal Fibrosing Alopecia, Lichen Planus Pigmentosus, Acne Rosacea, and Morbihan Disease. 2750 65