Psoriasis is a chronic inflammatory skin disease characterized by erythematous papules or plaques with silvery scales. It affects 2-5% of the population and has two peaks of onset around ages 20 and 60. The cause involves genetic predisposition and triggers like infection or stress. Symptoms include well-demarcated erythematous plaques with silvery scales that can appear anywhere on the skin. Management involves topical treatments, phototherapy, systemic drugs like methotrexate, and biologics that target cytokines like TNF and IL-12/23.
Psoriasis is a chronic inflammatory skin disease characterized by erythematous papules or plaques with silvery scales. It affects 2-5% of the population and has two peaks of onset around ages 20 and 60. The cause involves genetic predisposition and triggers like infection or stress. Symptoms include well-demarcated erythematous plaques with silvery scales that can appear anywhere on the skin. Management involves topical treatments, phototherapy, systemic drugs like methotrexate, and biologics that target cytokines like TNF and IL-12/23.
Psoriasis is a chronic inflammatory skin disease characterized by erythematous papules or plaques with silvery scales. It affects 2-5% of the population and has two peaks of onset around ages 20 and 60. The cause involves genetic predisposition and triggers like infection or stress. Symptoms include well-demarcated erythematous plaques with silvery scales that can appear anywhere on the skin. Management involves topical treatments, phototherapy, systemic drugs like methotrexate, and biologics that target cytokines like TNF and IL-12/23.
Psoriasis is a chronic inflammatory skin disease characterized by erythematous papules or plaques with silvery scales. It affects 2-5% of the population and has two peaks of onset around ages 20 and 60. The cause involves genetic predisposition and triggers like infection or stress. Symptoms include well-demarcated erythematous plaques with silvery scales that can appear anywhere on the skin. Management involves topical treatments, phototherapy, systemic drugs like methotrexate, and biologics that target cytokines like TNF and IL-12/23.
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Psoriasis is a chronic inflammatory skin disease characterized by erythematous plaques and silvery scales. It has genetic and immunological factors and can be triggered by various external and internal factors.
Guttate psoriasis characterized by small lesions mostly in young people. Chronic stable plaque psoriasis is the most common type. Unstable psoriasis presents with more inflammation.
Common sites include the elbows, knees, lower back, scalp and nails.
PSORIASIS
Definition
Psoriasis is one of the prototypic papulosquamous skin
diseases characterised by erythematous papules or plaques with silvery scales. It is a chronic inflammatory skin disease with increased epidermal proliferation related to dysregulation of the immune system. Epidemiology
Psoriasis is said to affect 2% of the world population. The
prevalence is up to 5% in selected Western population. Psoriasis has a bimodal age of disease onset. The first peak is around 20 and the second peak is around 60. People with disease onset around 20 year old have stronger genetic predisposition. They have a higher prevalence of having HLA-Cw6. The linkage to genetic factor is lower for the group with late onset disease. Etiology
The etiology of psoriasis remains unclear, although there
is evidence for genetic predisposition There is a that psoriasis could be an autoimmune disease, no autoantigen that could be responsible has been defined yet. Psoriasis can also be provoked by external and internal triggers, including mild trauma, sunburn, infections, systemic drugs and stress Clinical Features
Prototypic lesion: The typical lesion of psoriasis is a
well-demarcated erythematous plaque with silvery scales on top of the plaque . The affected patient may experience itchiness. The plaques may affect anywhere of the skin surface but the mucosa is normally spared. The scales may only be loosely attached and easily fall off from the skin. The disease may wax and wane, and not uncommonly is aggravated by trauma and irritation, infections, various drugs, seasonal changes and psychogenic stress. Chronic Stable Plaque Psoriasis
Chronic Stable Plaque Psoriasis Sites of predilection of
the characteristic plaques include the extensor surfaces of the elbows, knees, lower back and scalp. The genitalia and nails may also be affected. The plaques vary in size .New lesions may be induced at traumatised skin such as surgical scar, or even scratch marks (known as Kobner phenomenon). Guttate Psoriasis
It is a variant characterised by small coins or even
punctate lesions with less amount of scale affecting mostly young people. The disease may be precipitated by upper respiratory tract infection. Over half of these patients have some evidence of preceding streptococcal infection. A few may have prolonged disease remission after the acute episode. Unstable Psoriasis
Lesions are angry looking with more intense
inflammation. These may be redder in colour with less scaling. Lesions may be less well-demarcated and occasionally exudation and crust are found. Patients may experience more itchiness, irritation and even pain. Further progression to erythrodermic or pustular psoriasis can happen. Inappropriate use of corticosteroids, excessive irritation, sunburn are some of the factors not uncommonly associated with unstable psoriasis. Erythrodermic Psoriasis
When more than 90% of the body is involved by psoriasis,
it is defined as erythrodermic psoriasis. An affected patient is characterised by having generalised redness of skin and scaling. The colour may sometimes be described as dusky red. The face may occasionally be relatively spared. Individual plaques may not be obvious. Pustules may sometimes be found. Triggering factors are not uncommonly unidentified. Affected patients may have systemic symptoms. Pustular Psoriasis Tiny superficial pustules with a background of erythema may occur. The roof of the pustules is easily broken. These pustules can be distributed throughout the whole skin surface or more localised especially in and around the unstable lesions. Some patients may have lesions with matted scales with a yellowish hue and if biopsy of these lesions is performed, the histology shows sheets of subcorneal polymorphs. Though very discrete pustules may not be seen clinically, these lesions may be described as pustular psoriasis by some clinicians. Steroid withdrawal is the commonest precipitating factor encountered by the author as the cause of pustular psoriasis. Localised pustular psoriasis on the palms and soles is reported to be associated with smoking. Psoriasis in Specific Body Locations Scalp and face: The scalp is one of the most common sites affected by psoriasis. The typical plaques may extend slightly beyond the hairline . Some may involve the glabella region, eyebrows, and nasolabial fold, and in this situation it merges with seborrhoeic dermatitis Flexural regions: Lesions located at the axillae, inframammary folds, groins, intergluteal cleft and prepuce of the uncircumcised may present as shiny pink to red thin plaques or even patches. Fissure may sometimes be present. Nail: Nail involvement has been reported in 10 - 80% of patients with psoriasis . Features include onycholysis with or without the oil drop phenomenon, distal subungual hyperkeratosis, crumbly poorly adherent nail, loss of lustre among other changes. The finger and toe nails can be affected. Patients with nail involvement may have a higher incidence of arthropathy. Psoriatic nails may also predispose to fungal infection. Management
The Principle of Management
Appropriate skin care, avoidance of aggravating factors, the importance of keeping a good treatment history, cessation of smoking, avoidance of excessive alcohol drinking, reinforcement of the non-contagious nature and chronicity of the condition and conveying the message that psoriasis is amenable to very good control are the important contents in communication, especially in the first few encounters. Treatment Topical drugs: topical steroids, vitamin D analogues, tar, dithranol, keratolytics, calcineurin inhibitors, tazarotene. UV light therapy: UVB including PUVA, targeted phototherapy such as UVB delivered with the laser system Traditional systemic therapy: methotrexate, systemic retinoid, cyclosporine A Biologic therapy: etanercept, infliximab, adalimumab which target TNF ; ustekinumab which targets IL-12 & 23 1 Treatment
Combination therapy with a vitamin D analog
(calcipotriol and calcipotriene) or a retinoid such as tazarotene and a topical corticosteroid is more effective than therapy with either agent alone. Oatmeal baths may be helpful for itching. Solar or therapeutic ultraviolet (UV) radiation may be helpful. Various UV light treatments are usednow most commonly, UVB, although psoralen + UVB (PUVA) is still used. Among phototherapy options AAD guideline gives the highest recommendation to oral PUVA or a combination of PUVA and topical agents. Psoralen is a photosensitizer that is ingested prior to light exposure. PUVA treatment results in conjunctival hyperemia and dry eye, particularly if sun protection is not used. With proper eye protection, there does not appear to be a risk of cataract. Psoralens for either topical (bath) or systemic use may occasionally be difficult to obtain because of intermittent availability issues. According to the AAD guidelines, PUVA can result in long remissions, but long-term use of PUVA in Caucasians may increase the risk of squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) and possibly malignant melanoma. According to the study, exposure to more than 350 PUVA treatments greatly increases the risk of SC. General management
Any anxiety or worry should be identified and the patient
encouraged to relax or seek appropriate help. Reassurance that it is not infectious or disfiguring must be given to both patient and family. Also an open door system should operate so that the patient can get to a dermatologist or physiotherapist immediately there is an eruption. Dieting may be tried if there appears to be any allergy factor. Topical Applications
Many patients do well on topical treatment. Treatment
may be: Simple bland aqueous cream. Coal tar applications with salicylic acid and zinc oxide in soft paraffin may be used alone or with UVR. The patient is usually admitted to hospital. The ointment is applied every day to the whole body except face and scalp. Every 24 hours it is washed off in a bath containing coal tar solution. If UVR is given, it must be after a bath because suberythema general treatment is given daily using the Theraktin. This is the Goeckerman regimen. Diathranol in Lassars paste is used for resistant psoriasis It is highly effective but can burn the normal skin. The patient may be admitted to hospital or treated as an outpatient. If the patient is applying, the physiotherapist should look out for blisters or reddish purple stains on the skin and warn the patient of the danger. UVR with the Theraktin may be given in conjunction with diathranol as a daily suberythema dose. The paste is removed in coal tar bath before the UVR and is then reapplied afterwards. Corticosteroids cream produces good results at first but when treatment stops the diseases can return worse than before. It is useful in an acute eruption and on the face and hands because there is greater absorption in moist areas. The dangers of side effects make long-term use inadvisable. Systemic Applications Retinoids- a variant of vitamin A- taken in tablets form produces marked improvement. It produces unpleasant side effects such as dryness and cracking of the mouth, alopecia and pruritus. It is teratogenic (produces malfunction in a fetus), therefore must be avoided in pregnancy. Cytotoxic drugs such as methotrexate are sometimes used in severe cases. These have dangers such as damage to bone marrow, intestinal and liver tissues. Cyclosporine also may be useful in severe cases. Physiotherapy Management
Psoriasis can be treated very successfully with UVR.
Two sources are used: the Theraktin and PUVA. The Theraktin: This is usually in the form of a tunnel with four fluorescent tubes. The patient lies flat for the treatment, therefore in order to treat the whole body the patient is generally naked and lies supine for half the treatment session and prone for other half. The spectrum of UVR emitted is 390-280nm and peak emission is around 313nm,therefore this constitutes UVB treatment. It may be used alone or in conjunction with coal tar or diathranol. Treatment A suberythema dose is given daily or three times a week. The prominent parts of the body have a mild erythema, which fades before the next treatment is due. The time is maintained to maintain the reaction (e.g. 12.5% every 1-2 treatments.). When the lesions start to flatten and heal the same time is repeated and frequency of treatment reduced to twice weekly, once weekly and then once a fortnight. The course of treatment may be spread over 8-12 weeks. These patients tend to deteriorate during the autumn and need treatment in the winter or spring. About 75% of patients with guttate psoriasis respond to UVB. PUVA
This is psoralen plus UVA and is used for resistant
psoriasis. UVA is produced from fluorescent tubes, mounted upright in a hexagonal shaped cabinet inside which the patient stands throughout the treatment. The spectrum of UVR emitted is 330-390 nm and peaks at 360 nm. Infrared rays are also emitted and it is essential to have a cooling fan so that the patient can tolerate up to hour in the cabinet. PUVA Treatment Unit A record is kept of the total Joules count. This is essential because there is an undeniable risk of malignant melanoma in patients who have been exposed to between 1500 J and 2000 J. The patient attends three times a week until healing starts, and then frequency of treatment is reduced to twice weekly, once weekly, once per fortnight or monthly holding sessions. Precautions
Precautions/ dangers/ advice to patients on PUVA.
Do not take psoralen on an empty stomach. There is a real danger of cataract; therefore protective goggles are essential during exposure. Polaroid sunglasses must be worn from the time of taking the psoralen to at least 12 hours after. The psoralen is excreted in 8 hours but the effect of photosensitizing continues. The physiotherapist should test the glasses with a Black ray meter; the glasses must screen 90% of UVA. Patients are advised to wear protective glasses out of doors for at least 24 hours after taking the psoralen and also whilst watching television, a VDU screen or in fluorescent lighting. The skin must be covered in bright sunlight and a hat worn for 24 hours after treatment. Stop using all ointments during PUVA. If the skin is dry simple oil or lubricating lotions may be used. Do not become pregnant or father a child- contraceptive measures are essential during PUVA treatment. A check up is essential every month after completing of Duration of treatment
This may be 5 minutes at first for skin types I and II and
progressed by 1 minute up to 15 minutes. It may start at 6 minutes and progress by 2 minutes up to 20 minutes for skin type III and IV. It may start at 7 minutes and progress by 3 minutes up to 25 minutes for skin type V and VI.