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This fact sheet contains general information about psoriasis. It describes
what psoriasis is, what causes it, and what the treatment options are.
If you have further questions after reading this fact sheet, you may wish
to discuss them with your doctor.
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What
Is Psoriasis?
Psoriasis is a chronic
(long-lasting) skin disease characterized by scaling and inflammation.
Scaling occurs when cells in the outer layer of the skin reproduce faster
than normal and pile up on the skins surface.
Psoriasis affects between 1 and 2 percent of the United States population,
or about 5.5 million people. Although the disease occurs in all age groups
and about equally in men and women, it primarily affects adults. People
with psoriasis may suffer discomfort, including pain and itching, restricted
motion in their joints, and emotional distress.
In its most typical form, psoriasis results in patches of thick, red
skin covered with silvery scales. These patches, which are sometimes referred
to as plaques, usually itch and may burn. The skin at the joints may crack.
Psoriasis most often occurs on the elbows, knees, scalp, lower back, face,
palms, and soles of the feet but it can affect any skin site. The disease
may also affect the fingernails, the toenails, and the soft tissues inside
the mouth and genitalia. About 15 percent of people with psoriasis have
joint inflammation that produces arthritis symptoms. This condition is
called psoriatic arthritis.
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What
Causes Psoriasis?
Recent research indicates that psoriasis is likely a disorder of the
immune system. This system includes a type of white blood cell, called
a T cell, that normally helps protect the body against infection and disease.
Scientists now think that, in psoriasis, an abnormal immune system causes
activity by T cells in the skin. These T cells trigger the inflammation
and excessive skin cell reproduction seen in people with psoriasis.
In about one-third of the cases, psoriasis is inherited. Researchers
are studying large families affected by psoriasis to identify a gene or
genes that cause the disease. (Genes govern every bodily function and
determine the inherited traits passed from parent to child.)
People with psoriasis may notice that there are times when their skin
worsens, then improves. Conditions that may cause flareups include changes
in climate, infections, stress, and dry skin. Also, certain medicines,
most notably beta-blockers, which are used to treat high blood pressure,
and lithium or drugs used to treat depression, may trigger an outbreak
or worsen the disease.
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How
Is Psoriasis Diagnosed?
Doctors usually diagnose psoriasis after a careful examination of the
skin. However, diagnosis may be difficult because psoriasis can look like
other skin diseases. A pathologist may assist with diagnosis by examining
a small skin sample (biopsy) under a microscope.
There are several
forms of psoriasis. The most common form is plaque psoriasis (its
scientific name is psoriasis vulgaris). In plaque psoriasis, lesions have
a reddened base covered by silvery scales. Other forms of psoriasis include
- Guttate psoriasis--Small,
drop-like lesions appear on the trunk, limbs, and scalp. Guttate psoriasis
is most often triggered by bacterial infections (for example, Streptococcus).
- Pustular psoriasis--Blisters
of noninfectious pus appear on the skin. Attacks of pustular psoriasis
may be triggered by medications, infections, emotional stress, or exposure
to certain chemicals. Pustular psoriasis may affect either small or
large areas of the body.
- Inverse psoriasis--Large,
dry, smooth, vividly red plaques occur in the folds of the skin near
the genitals, under the breasts, or in the armpits. Inverse psoriasis
is related to increased sensitivity to friction and sweating and may
be painful or itchy.
- Erythrodermic
psoriasis--Widespread reddening and scaling of the skin is often
accompanied by itching or pain. Erythrodermic psoriasis may be precipitated
by severe sunburn, use of oral steroids (such as cortisone), or a drug-related
rash.
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What
Treatments Are Available for Psoriasis?
Doctors generally
treat psoriasis in steps based on the severity of the disease, the extent
of the areas involved, the type of psoriasis, or the patients responsiveness
to initial treatments. This is sometimes called the 1-2-3 approach.
In step 1, medicines are applied to the skin (topical treatment). Step
2 focuses on light treatments (phototherapy). Step 3 involves taking medicines
internally, usually by mouth (systemic treatment).
Over time, affected
skin can become resistant to treatment, especially when topical corticosteroids
are used. Also, a treatment that works very well in one person may have
little effect in another. Thus, doctors commonly use a trial-and-error
approach to find a treatment that works, and they may switch treatments
periodically (for example, every 12 to 24 months) if resistance or adverse
reactions occur. Treatment depends on the location of lesions, their size,
the amount of the skin affected, previous response to treatment, and patients
perceptions about their skin condition and preferences for treatment.
In addition, treatment is often tailored to the specific form of the disorder.
Topical
Treatment
- Treatments applied directly to the skin are sometimes effective in
clearing psoriasis. Doctors find that some patients respond well to
sunlight, corticosteroid ointments, medicines derived from vitamin D3,
vitamin A (retinoids), coal tar, or anthralin. Other topical measures,
such as bath solutions and moisturizers, may be soothing but are seldom
strong enough to clear lesions over the long term and may need to be
combined with more potent remedies.
- Sunlight--Daily,
regular, short doses of sunlight that do not produce a sunburn clear
psoriasis in many people.
- Corticosteroids--Available
in different strengths, corticosteroids (cortisone) are usually applied
twice a day. Short-term treatment is often effective in improving but
not completely clearing psoriasis. If less than 10 percent of the skin
is involved, some doctors will begin treatment with a high-potency corticosteroid
ointment (for example, Diprolene®,*
Temovate®,
Ultravate®,
or Psorcon®).
High-potency steroids may also be used for treatment-resistant plaques,
particularly those on the hands or feet. Long-term use or overuse of
high-potency steroids can lead to worsening of the psoriasis, thinning
of the skin, internal side effects, and resistance to the treatments
benefits. Medium-potency corticosteroids may be used on the torso or
limbs; low-potency preparations are used on delicate skin areas.
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| *Brand names
included in this fact sheet begin with a capital letter and are
provided as examples only. Their inclusion does not mean that
these products are endorsed by the National Institutes of Health
or any other Government agency. Also, if a particular brand name
is not mentioned, this does not mean or imply that the product
is unsatisfactory. |
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- Calcipotriene--This drug is a synthetic form of vitamin D3.
(It is not the same as vitamin D supplements.) Applying calcipotriene
ointment (for example, Dovonex®)
twice a day controls excessive production of skin cells. Because calcipotriene
can irritate the skin, however, it is not recommended for the face or
genitals. After 4 months of treatment, about 60 percent of patients
have a good to excellent response. The safety of using the drug for
cases affecting more than 20 percent of the skin is unknown, and using
it on widespread areas of the skin may raise the amount of calcium in
the body to unhealthy levels.
- Coal tar--Coal tar may be applied directly to the skin, used
in a bath solution, or used on the scalp as a shampoo. It is available
in different strengths, but the most potent form may be irritating.
It is sometimes combined with ultraviolet B (UVB) phototherapy. Compared
with steroids, coal tar has fewer side effects, but it is messy and
less effective and thus is not popular with many patients. Other drawbacks
include its failure to provide long-term help for most patients, its
strong odor, and its tendency to stain skin or clothing.
- Anthralin--Doctors
sometimes use a 15- to 30-minute application of anthralin ointment,
cream, or paste to treat chronic psoriasis lesions. However, this treatment
often fails to adequately clear lesions, it may irritate the skin, and
it stains skin and clothing brown or purple. In addition, anthralin
is unsuitable for acute or actively inflamed eruptions.
- Topical retinoid--The
retinoid tazarotene (Tazorac) is a fast-drying, clear gel that is applied
to the surface of the skin. Although this preparation does not act as
quickly as topical corticosteroids, it has fewer side effects. Because
it is irritating to normal skin, it should be used with caution in skin
folds. Women of childbearing age should use birth control when using
tazarotene.
- Salicylic acid--Salicylic acid is used to remove scales, and
is most effective when combined with topical steroids, anthralin, or
coal tar.
- Bath solutions--People
with psoriasis may find that bathing in water with an oil added, then
applying a moisturizer, can soothe their skin. Scales can be removed
and itching reduced by soaking for 15 minutes in water containing a
tar solution, oiled oatmeal, Epsom salts, or Dead Sea salts.
- Moisturizers--When
applied regularly over a long period, moisturizers have a cosmetic and
soothing effect. Preparations that are thick and greasy usually work
best because they hold water in the skin, reducing the scales and the
itching.
Phototherapy
- Ultraviolet (UV)
light from the sun causes the activated T cells in the skin to die,
a process called apoptosis. Apoptosis reduces inflammation and slows
the overproduction of skin cells that causes scaling. Daily, short,
nonburning exposure to sunlight clears or improves psoriasis in many
people. Therefore, sunlight may be included among initial treatments
for the disease. A more controlled form of artificial light treatment
may be used in mild psoriasis (UVB phototherapy) or in more severe or
extensive psoriasis (psoralen and ultraviolet A [PUVA] therapy).
- UVB phototherapy--Some artificial sources of UVB light are
similar to sunlight. Newer sources, called narrow-band UVB, emit the
part of the ultraviolet spectrum band that is most helpful for psoriasis.
Some physicians will start with UVB treatments instead of topical agents.
UVB phototherapy is also used to treat widespread psoriasis and lesions
that resist topical treatment. This type of phototherapy is normally
administered in a doctors office by using a light panel or light box,
although some patients can use UVB light boxes at home with a doctors
guidance. Generally at least three treatments a week for 2 or 3 months
are needed. UVB phototherapy may be combined with other treatments as
well. One combined therapy program, referred to as the Ingram regime,
involves a coal tar bath, UVB phototherapy, and application of an anthralin-salicylic
acid paste, which is left on the skin for 6 to 24 hours. A similar regime,
the Goeckerman treatment, involves application of coal tar ointment
and UVB phototherapy.
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- PUVA--This treatment combines oral or topical administration
of a medicine called psoralen with exposure to ultraviolet A (UVA) light.
Psoralen makes the body more sensitive to this light. PUVA is normally
used when more than 10 percent of the skin is affected or when rapid
clearing is required because the disease interferes with a persons
occupation (for example, when a models face or a carpenters hands
are involved). Compared with UVB treatment, PUVA treatment taken two
to three times a week clears psoriasis more consistently and in fewer
treatments. However, it is associated with more short-term side effects,
including nausea, headache, fatigue, burning, and itching. Long-term
treatment is associated with an increased risk of squamous cell and
melanoma skin cancers. PUVA can be combined with some oral medications
(retinoids and hydroxyurea) to increase its effectiveness. Simultaneous
use of drugs that suppress the immune system, such as cyclosporine,
have little beneficial effect and increase the risk of cancer. In very
rare cases, patients who must travel long distances for PUVA treatments
may, with a physicians close supervision, be taught to administer this
treatment at home.
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- Systemic
Treatment
For more severe forms
of psoriasis, doctors sometimes prescribe medicines that are taken internally:
- Methotrexate--This treatment, which can be taken by pill or
injection, slows cell production by suppressing the immune system. Patients
taking methotrexate must be closely monitored because it can cause liver
damage and/or decrease the production of oxygen-carrying red blood cells,
infection-fighting white blood cells, and clot-enhancing platelets.
As a precaution, doctors do not prescribe the drug for people with long-term
liver disease or anemia. Methotrexate should not be used by pregnant
women, by women who are planning to get pregnant, or by their male partners.
- Cyclosporine--Taken orally, cyclosporine (Neoral®)
acts by suppressing the immune system in a way that slows the rapid
turnover of skin cells. It may provide quick relief of symptoms, but
it is usually effective only during the course of treatment. The best
candidates for this therapy are those with severe psoriasis who have
not responded to or cannot tolerate other systemic therapies. Cyclosporine
may impair kidney function or cause high blood pressure (hypertension),
so patients must be carefully monitored by a doctor. Also, cyclosporine
is not recommended for patients who have a weak immune system, those
who have had substantial exposure to UVB or PUVA in the past, or those
who are pregnant or breast-feeding.
- Hydroxyurea (Hydrea®)--Compared with
methotrexate and cyclosporine, hydroxyurea is less toxic but also less
effective. It is sometimes combined with PUVA or UVB. Possible side
effects include anemia and a decrease in white blood cells and platelets.
Like methotrexate and cyclosporine, hydroxyurea must be avoided by pregnant
women or those who are planning to become pregnant.
- Retinoids--A retinoid, such as acitretin (Soriatane®),
is a compound with vitamin A-like properties that may be prescribed
for severe cases of psoriasis that do not respond to other therapies.
Because this treatment also may cause birth defects, women must protect
themselves from pregnancy beginning 1 month before through 3 years after
treatment. Most patients experience a recurrence of psoriasis after
acitretin is discontinued.
- Antibiotics--Although
not indicated in routine treatment, antibiotics may be employed when
an infection, such as Streptococcus, triggers the outbreak of
psoriasis, as in certain cases of guttate psoriasis.
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What
Are Some Promising Areas of Psoriasis Research?
Researchers continue to search for genes that contribute to the inherited
and other causes of psoriasis. Scientists are also working to improve
our understanding of what happens in the body to trigger this disease.
In addition, much research is focused on developing new and better treatments.
Some of these experimental treatments, such as agents directed at the
specific types of T cells involved, work to improve the disease with less
overall suppression of the immune system.
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How
Can People Contribute to Psoriasis Research?
- The National Psoriasis Tissue Bank, which is supported by the National
Psoriasis Foundation, is helping researchers worldwide study the inherited
tendency toward psoriasis. The tissue bank has DNA from the white blood
cells of more than 250 families affected by the disease. There is particular
interest in large families in which psoriasis is both common and spans
two or more generations. More recently, the tissue bank has begun research
involving families having at least two siblings with psoriasis. People
seeking more information or families interested in participating in
a study should contact
- National Psoriasis
Tissue Bank
Baylor University Medical Center
Suite 656, Wadley Tower
3600 Gaston Avenue
Dallas, TX 75246
214/820-2635
Fax: 214/820-1296
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Where
Can People Find More Information About Psoriasis?
- National Psoriasis Foundation
6600 SW 92nd Avenue, Suite 300
Portland, OR 97223
503/244-7404
800/723-9166
Fax: 503/245-0626
World Wide Web address: http://www.psoriasis.org
- The National Psoriasis Foundation provides physician referrals and
publishes pamphlets and newsletters that include information on support
groups, research, and new drugs and other treatments. The foundation
also promotes community awareness of psoriasis.
- National Institute
of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases Information
Clearinghouse
1 AMS Circle
Bethesda, MD 20892-3675
301/495-4484
TTY: 301/565-2966
Fax: 301/718-6366
World Wide Web address: http://www.nih.gov/niams/
This clearinghouse, a public service sponsored by the National Institute
of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases (NIAMS), provides
information about various forms of these diseases. The clearinghouse
distributes patient and professional education materials and also refers
people to other sources of information.
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Acknowledgments
The NIAMS gratefully
acknowledges the assistance of Alan N. Moshell, M.D., of NIAMS; Gerald
G. Krueger, M.D., of the University of Utah; Robert Stern, M.D., of Beth
Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston, MA; and the National Psoriasis
Foundation in the review and update of this fact sheet.
| The National
Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases (NIAMS),
a part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), leads the Federal
medical research effort in arthritis and musculoskeletal and skin
diseases. The NIAMS supports research and research training throughout
the United States, as well as on the NIH campus in Bethesda, MD, and
disseminates health and research information. The National Institute
of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases Information Clearinghouse
is a public service sponsored by the NIAMS that provides health information
and information sources. Additional information can be found on the
NIAMS Web site at http://www.nih.gov/niams/.
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KEY WORDS
Antibodies:
Special proteins, produced by the body's immune system, that help
fight and destroy viruses, bacteria, and other foreign substances
that invade the body.
Autoantibodies:
Abnormal antibodies produced against the body's own tissues.
Autoimmune disease:
A disease in which the immune system destroys or attacks a person's
own tissues.
Cytokines:
Chemical messengers in the body that help direct and regulate response
and are involved in cell-to-cell communication.
Dermis:
The layer of skin beneath the epidermis.
Emollient:
A substance composed of fat or oil that soothes and softens the skin.
Epidermis:
The outermost layer of skin.
Erythrodermic psoriasis:
A form of psoriasis characterized by widespread reddening and scaling
of the skin often accompanied by itching or pain. Symptoms may be
precipitated by severe sunburn, use of oral steroids, or a drug-related
rash.
Gene:
A unit of inheritance that contains the instructions, or code, that
a cell uses to make a specific product, usually a protein. Genes are
made of a substance called DNA. They govern every body function and
determine inherited traits passed from parent to child.
Genetics:
The science of understanding how diseases, conditions, and traits
are inherited.
Guttate psoriasis:
A form of psoriasis characterized by drop-like lesions on the trunk,
limbs, and scalp. Symptoms may be triggered by viral respiratory infections
or certain bacterial (streptococcal) infections.
Histologic examination:
The study of a tissue specimen by staining it and examining it under
a microscope.
Inflammation:
A characteristic reaction of tissues to injury or disease. It is marked
by four signs: swelling, redness, heat, and pain.
Immune response:
The reactions of the immune system to foreign substances.
Immune system:
A complex network of specialized cells and organs that work together
to defend the body against attacks by foreign substances, such as
bacteria and viruses.
Inverse psoriasis:
A form of psoriasis characterized by large, dry, smooth, vividly red
plaques in the folds of skin.
Keratolytic:
A substance that promotes the softening and peeling of the epidermis.
Phototherapy:
Use of natural or artificial light to treat a disease.
Plaques:
Patches of thickened and reddened skin that are covered by silvery
scales.
Psoriasis:
A chronic (long-lasting) skin disease characterized by scaling and
inflammation. Scaling occurs when cells in the outer layer of skin
reproduce faster than normal and pile up on the skin's surface. Possibly
a disorder of the immune system.
Psoriasis vulgaris:
The most common form of psoriasis, characterized by reddened lesions
covered by silvery scales.
Psoriatic arthritis:
Joint inflammation that occurs in about 10 percent of people with
psoriasis.
PUVA:
A treatment sometimes used for extensive or severe psoriasis that
combines oral or topical administration of a medicine called psoralen
with exposure to ultraviolet A (UVA) light.
Systemic treatment:
A treatment, such as a pill, that is taken internally.
Topical agent:
A treatment, such as a cream, salve, or ointment, that is applied
to the surface of the skin.
Toxicity:
The potential of a drug or treatment to cause harmful side effects.
T cell:
A type of white blood cell that is part of the immune system and normally
helps protect the body against infection and disease. In psoriasis,
it also can trigger inflammation and excessive skin cell reproduction.
UVB phototherapy:
An artificial light treatment used for mild psoriasis.
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| September 1999 |
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