Vol 7, No 4 (2021)
Research paper
Published online: 2022-01-31
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Epidemiological evaluation of paediatric psoriasis patients at the Dermatology Department

Natalia Bień1, Klaudia Lipińska1, Michał Niedźwiedź2, Małgorzata Skibińska2, Joanna Maria Narbutt2, Aleksandra Lesiak2
·
Forum Dermatologicum 2021;7(4):100-103.
Affiliations
  1. Experimental, Clinical and Surgical Dermatology Scientific Club, University of Lodz
  2. Department of Dermatology, Paediatric Dermatology and Oncology, Medical University of Lodz

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Vol 7, No 4 (2021)
ORIGINAL ARTICLES
Published online: 2022-01-31

Abstract

Introduction: Psoriasis is a chronic autoinflammatory disease, which mostly affects skin and joints. Patients with psoriasis are at risk of developing comorbidities such as diabetes, cardiovascular diseases or mental disorders. It is reported that even one-third of the total psoriatic cases may have skin symptoms in childhood. 

Material and methods: The study aimed to perform a retrospective analysis of paediatric patients with psoriasis admitted to the dermatological department between 2018 and 2020. Patients’ data were analysed for age, gender, medical diagnosis (ICD-10) including subtypes of psoriasis, treatment, the clinical course of the disease and results of the diagnostic tests including cholesterol fractions and blood glucose level. 

Results: In the years 2018–2020 73 children were admitted to the dermatological department. The number of female patients 47 (64.38%) significantly dominated over the number of male patients 26 (35.62%). Almost 95% of them were diagnosed with psoriasis vulgaris. Only 3 cases (4.11%) of generalized pustular psoriasis and 1 case (1.37%) of psoriatic arthritis were reported. Almost 20% of children had a positive family history of psoriasis. Readmission to the ward was required in 35.62% of the cases. 23.4% of patients presented abnormality in lipid profile. 15% had various comorbidities. 

Conclusions: Better understanding of psoriasis and its management from an early age, may improve the quality of life of psoriasis patients and prevent them from developing serious comorbidities in the future.

Abstract

Introduction: Psoriasis is a chronic autoinflammatory disease, which mostly affects skin and joints. Patients with psoriasis are at risk of developing comorbidities such as diabetes, cardiovascular diseases or mental disorders. It is reported that even one-third of the total psoriatic cases may have skin symptoms in childhood. 

Material and methods: The study aimed to perform a retrospective analysis of paediatric patients with psoriasis admitted to the dermatological department between 2018 and 2020. Patients’ data were analysed for age, gender, medical diagnosis (ICD-10) including subtypes of psoriasis, treatment, the clinical course of the disease and results of the diagnostic tests including cholesterol fractions and blood glucose level. 

Results: In the years 2018–2020 73 children were admitted to the dermatological department. The number of female patients 47 (64.38%) significantly dominated over the number of male patients 26 (35.62%). Almost 95% of them were diagnosed with psoriasis vulgaris. Only 3 cases (4.11%) of generalized pustular psoriasis and 1 case (1.37%) of psoriatic arthritis were reported. Almost 20% of children had a positive family history of psoriasis. Readmission to the ward was required in 35.62% of the cases. 23.4% of patients presented abnormality in lipid profile. 15% had various comorbidities. 

Conclusions: Better understanding of psoriasis and its management from an early age, may improve the quality of life of psoriasis patients and prevent them from developing serious comorbidities in the future.

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Keywords

psoriasis; paediatric psoriasis; comorbidities

About this article
Title

Epidemiological evaluation of paediatric psoriasis patients at the Dermatology Department

Journal

Forum Dermatologicum

Issue

Vol 7, No 4 (2021)

Article type

Research paper

Pages

100-103

Published online

2022-01-31

Page views

5105

Article views/downloads

28

DOI

10.5603/FD.2021.0018

Bibliographic record

Forum Dermatologicum 2021;7(4):100-103.

Keywords

psoriasis
paediatric psoriasis
comorbidities

Authors

Natalia Bień
Klaudia Lipińska
Michał Niedźwiedź
Małgorzata Skibińska
Joanna Maria Narbutt
Aleksandra Lesiak

References (18)
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