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[Local treatments of cutaneous psoriasis].
Rev Prat. 1991 Oct 15; 41(22):2174-6.RP

Abstract

Most of psoriatic patients require topical therapy. Dermal application of drugs may be the unique treatment; but it can also combined with oral drugs, or phototherapy. Patients are treated at home or in day-care centers; some require hospitalization. Topical corticosteroids are widely used: abuses are frequently observed, therefore skin and systemic side-effects may occur to varying degrees. Tars are still useful. Short-contact anthralin is active and well tolerated, and compliance is better than with conventional tar therapy, especially in children. Topical mechlorethamine clears the plaques but contact dermatitis may occur. New therapeutic approaches include Vitamin D3 analogues.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Service de dermatologie, hôpital Tarnier (CHU Cochin), Paris.

Pub Type(s)

English Abstract
Journal Article

Language

fre

PubMed ID

1784918

Citation

Enjolras, O. "[Local Treatments of Cutaneous Psoriasis]." La Revue Du Praticien, vol. 41, no. 22, 1991, pp. 2174-6.
Enjolras O. [Local treatments of cutaneous psoriasis]. Rev Prat. 1991;41(22):2174-6.
Enjolras, O. (1991). [Local treatments of cutaneous psoriasis]. La Revue Du Praticien, 41(22), 2174-6.
Enjolras O. [Local Treatments of Cutaneous Psoriasis]. Rev Prat. 1991 Oct 15;41(22):2174-6. PubMed PMID: 1784918.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - [Local treatments of cutaneous psoriasis]. A1 - Enjolras,O, PY - 1991/10/15/pubmed PY - 1991/10/15/medline PY - 1991/10/15/entrez SP - 2174 EP - 6 JF - La Revue du praticien JO - Rev Prat VL - 41 IS - 22 N2 - Most of psoriatic patients require topical therapy. Dermal application of drugs may be the unique treatment; but it can also combined with oral drugs, or phototherapy. Patients are treated at home or in day-care centers; some require hospitalization. Topical corticosteroids are widely used: abuses are frequently observed, therefore skin and systemic side-effects may occur to varying degrees. Tars are still useful. Short-contact anthralin is active and well tolerated, and compliance is better than with conventional tar therapy, especially in children. Topical mechlorethamine clears the plaques but contact dermatitis may occur. New therapeutic approaches include Vitamin D3 analogues. SN - 0035-2640 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/1784918/[Local_treatments_of_cutaneous_psoriasis]_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -
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