1. Impact of psychiatric comorbidities in psoriasis, hidradenitis suppurativa and atopic dermatitis: The importance of a psychodermatological approach
- Author
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Michela Iannone, Agata Janowska, Salvatore Panduri, Riccardo Morganti, Giulia Davini, Marco Romanelli, and Valentina Dini
- Subjects
Depressive Disorder, Major ,atopic dermatitis ,psychological burden ,hidradenitis suppurativa ,psoriasis ,Dermatology ,inflammatory skin disease ,psychiatric comorbidity ,psychodermatological approach ,Symptom Flare Up ,Biochemistry ,Dermatitis, Atopic ,Quality of Life ,Humans ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ,Molecular Biology - Abstract
There is a strong interaction between the immunological and nervous system in the skin. Lesions that are physically disfiguring and chronically relapsing have a high impact on quality of life (QoL) and can result in the emergence of psychiatric disorders. The literature data confirm a higher prevalence of psychiatric disorders in patients with psoriasis, hidradenitis suppurativa (HS) and atopic dermatitis (AD), but such data are compromised by low-quality evidence due to methodological heterogeneity.The primary aim was to analyse the prevalence of psychiatric comorbidities in a group of psoriasis, AD and HS patients compared with a control group. The secondary aims were to evaluate the impact of psychiatric comorbidities on the disease development, severity, flare-ups and QoL.A total of 59 cases and 64 controls were included.Generalized anxiety disorder and depressive disorder with anxious distress were found to be risk factors for AD. Age, smoking and substance-related disorder showed a specific association with HS. Major depressive disorder showed a specific association with dermatology life quality index (DLQI) and all the above disease flare-ups.Atopic dermatitis, psoriasis and HS are associated with psychiatric disorders. A psychodermatological approach improves outcomes in terms of QoL, disease flare-ups and long-term management.
- Published
- 2022
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