The British journal of dermatology
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Pruritus in patients with psoriasis has been reported to be more common than previously thought. ⋯ Pruritus is a common feature in psoriasis. Considering the well-known roles of neuropeptides in pathogenesis of both psoriasis and pruritus, increased SPR, TrkA and CGRPR may be involved in the pathogenesis of pruritus in psoriasis and in the severity of psoriasis.
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Multicenter Study
Prevalence of physical symptoms of itch, pain and fatigue in patients with skin diseases in general practice.
Physical symptoms of skin diseases have been shown to negatively affect patients' wellbeing. Although insight into physical symptoms accompanying skin diseases is relevant for the management and treatment of skin diseases, the prevalence of physical symptoms among patients with skin diseases is a rather unexplored territory. ⋯ Itch and fatigue and, to a somewhat lesser extent, pain have a high prevalence among patients with skin diseases. Clinicians should be encouraged to carefully assess itch, pain and fatigue in patients with skin diseases, and where appropriate focus treatment to these symptoms.
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Historically, ascertainment of nonmelanoma skin cancer (NMSC) by cancer registries in the U.K. has been shown to be incomplete in several studies. However, recent evidence suggesting that almost all clinically diagnosed NMSCs are verified histologically, coupled with the increasing availability of electronic histopathology data to cancer registries, raises the possibility that this situation may have improved. ⋯ Ascertainment of NMSC has probably improved since the advent and use of electronic pathology data. Ongoing increases in age-adjusted incidence, combined with ageing of the population, will have major implications for the clinical workload associated with NMSC for the foreseeable future.
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Microvascular abnormalities (capillary elongation, widening and tortuosity) are a characteristic feature of psoriasis and form one of the pathological diagnostic criteria. However, it is still not entirely clear when these microcirculatory changes appear in the skin of psoriatic subjects. Some studies suggest that capillary dilatation and elongation are present in the clinically uninvolved skin of psoriatic patients even at sites at which psoriatic plaques rarely occur. ⋯ These findings indicate that prior to the development of clinical lesions there are no significant morphological differences between the dermal microvessels in the clinically uninvolved skin of psoriatic subjects and the dermal microvessels in the normal skin of healthy volunteers. However, during plaque formation, the superficial papillary microvessels in plaque skin undergo a striking, characteristic change, i.e. elongation, widening and tortuosity. These blood vessels must therefore, at least in part, play an important, necessary, but probably secondary role in the pathogenesis of clinical lesions in psoriasis.