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Study: Environmental allergens linked to acute itching in eczema patients
Source: ANI, Date: , 2021
A
new research has indicated that itching often doesn't respond to antihistamines
because the itch signals are being carried to the brain along a previously
unrecognized pathway that current drugs don't target. New research from
Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis indicates that allergens
in the environment often are to blame for episodes of acute itch in eczema
patients.
The
new findings, published in the journal Cell, point to a possible new target and
strategy to help eczema patients cope with those episodes of acute and severe
itch. "Years ago, we used to think that itch and pain were carried along
the same subway lines in the nerves to the brain, but it turned out they
weren't, and these new findings show there's another pathway entirely that's
causing these episodes of acute itching in eczema patients," said
principal investigator Brian S. Kim, MD, a dermatologist and an associate
professor of medicine.
"The
itch can be maddening. Patients may rate their chronic itch at around a 5 on a
scale of 10, but that goes up to 10 during acute itch flares. Now that we know
those acute flares are being transmitted in an entirely different way, we can
target that pathway, and maybe we can help those patients," added Kim. The
typical pathway for itching in eczema patients involves cells in the skin that
are activated and then release histamine, which can be inhibited with
antihistamine drugs. But with this acute itching, a different type of cell in
the bloodstream transmits itch signals to the nerves. Read more at :Study: Environmental allergens linked to acute itching in eczema patients
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