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Taking
the Itch Out of Eczema
(HealthScoutNews)
-- Long-term management that combines new and old kinds of therapy
is the recommended approach for treating eczema.
That opinion comes from international
dermatology experts in a report in the May issue of the British
Journal of Dermatology.
Eczema is an itchy rash that affects
many infants and children. It affects between 10 percent to 15
percent of children under age 5 in developed countries and the
number of cases are increasing.
Previously, doctors focused on
treating acute attacks of eczema with short courses of corticosteroid
creams. Safety concerns have led to restrictions on the intensity
and duration of topical corticosteroid use, especially in small
children and in delicate areas of the body such as the face, neck
and skin folds.
This new report says that new medications
called calcineurin inhibitors should be used to relieve eczema
symptoms over the long-term. These new medicated creams turn off
specific inflammatory cells in the skin that cause eczema-related
redness and broken skin.
Topical calcineurin inhibitors
are not steroids and don't cause the skin atrophy, blood vessel
growth, glaucoma or growth retardation associated with corticosteroids,
the experts note.
The new treatment approach was
adopted by experts from 10 countries who attended the 2nd International
Consensus Conference on Atopic Dematitis. The conference was sponsored
by a grant from Novartis Pharmaceuticals, which makes a calcineurin
inhibitor medication.
More information
Here's where you can learn more
about eczema.
Reference
Source 101
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