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      The regular use of an emollient improves symptoms of atopic dermatitis in children: a randomized controlled study

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          Atopic dermatitis: a disease of altered skin barrier and immune dysregulation.

          Atopic dermatitis (AD) is an important chronic or relapsing inflammatory skin disease that often precedes asthma and allergic disorders. New insights into the genetics and pathophysiology of AD point to an important role of structural abnormalities in the epidermis as well as immune dysregulation not only for this skin disease but also for the development of asthma and allergies. Patients with AD have a unique predisposition to colonization or infection by microbial organisms, most notably Staphylococcus aureus and herpes simplex virus. Measures directed at healing and protecting the skin barrier and addressing the immune dysregulation are essential in the treatment of patients with AD, and early intervention may improve outcomes for both the skin disease as well as other target organs. © 2011 John Wiley & Sons A/S.
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            The patient-oriented eczema measure: development and initial validation of a new tool for measuring atopic eczema severity from the patients' perspective.

            To develop a simple, valid, repeatable, and readily understandable patient-oriented assessment measure for monitoring disease activity in children and adults with atopic eczema. Qualitative semistructured patient interviews identified a list of symptoms of atopic eczema. These symptoms were quantitatively analyzed in a larger patient population to identify which symptoms were important to patients and amenable to monitoring as part of a scoring system. The outpatient Department of Dermatology at the Queen's Medical Centre, University Hospital, Nottingham, England, and 5 local general practices. Four hundred thirty-five patients with atopic eczema. Seven symptoms were incorporated into the final patient-oriented eczema measure using a simple 5-point scale of frequency of occurrence during the previous week, with a maximum total score of 28. Validity testing against the Dermatology Life Quality Index, Children's Dermatology Life Quality Index, and patients' global severity assessments showed good correlation (r = 0.78, r = 0.73, and r = 0.81, respectively; P<.001). Internal consistency was high (Cronbach alpha = 0.88), and test-retest reliability was good, with 95% of scores falling within 2.6 points on repeat testing (mean score difference, 0.04; SD, 1.32). Individual variables in the measure demonstrated sensitivity to change during a 4-week in-clinic period and an 18-week randomized controlled clinical trial. The patient-oriented eczema measure is a practical self-assessed measurement tool for monitoring aspects of atopic eczema that are important to patients in routine clinical practice or in the clinical trial setting.
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              The U.K. Working Party's Diagnostic Criteria for Atopic Dermatitis. III. Independent hospital validation.

              In order to qualify as a case of atopic dermatitis, we propose that an individual must have an itchy skin condition plus three or more of the following: history of flexural involvement, a history of asthma/hay fever, a history of a generalized dry skin, onset of rash under the age of 2 years, or visible flexural dermatitis. When tested in an independent sample of 200 consecutive dermatology outpatients of all ages, this arrangement of the diagnostic criteria achieved 69% sensitivity and 96% specificity when validated against physician's diagnosis. Based on the findings of this first exercise, minor modifications in the wording of the criteria were undertaken, and these were tested on a sample of 114 consecutive children attending out-patient paediatric dermatology clinics. Overall discrimination improved, with a sensitivity of 85% and specificity of 96%. The simplified criteria are easy to use, take under 2 min per patient to ascertain, and do not require subjects to undress. These two independent validation studies suggest that the newly proposed criteria for atopic dermatitis perform reasonably well in hospital out-patient patients. Further validation in community settings and in developing countries is needed.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of the European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology
                J Eur Acad Dermatol Venereol
                Wiley
                09269959
                July 2018
                July 2018
                March 09 2018
                : 32
                : 7
                : 1180-1187
                Affiliations
                [1 ]2nd Dermatology Clinic; Colentina Clinical Hospital; “Carol Davila” University of Medicine; Bucharest Romania
                [2 ]Pediatric Dermatology unit; Hôpital Pellegrin-Enfants; CHU Bordeaux; University Hospital of Bordeaux; Bordeaux France
                [3 ]East-Tallinn Central Hospital; Tallinn Estonia
                [4 ]Center of Allergy; Vilnius City Clinical Hospital Antakalnis affiliation; Vilnius Lithuania
                [5 ]Specjalistyczne Gabinety Lekarskie; “DERMED”; Lodz Poland
                [6 ]Pierre Fabre Dermatologie; Lavaur France
                [7 ]Pierre Fabre DermoCosmétique; Lavaur France
                Article
                10.1111/jdv.14849
                c3cc1607-774d-4d15-8113-6f8ec470defc
                © 2018

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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