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Volume 68 Numbers 4 & 5 September / October 2001 |
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| Evaluation and Treatment of Itching in HIV-Infected Patients | 298308 |
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| Address correspondence to Donald Rudikoff, M.D., Department of Dermatology, Box 1048, One East 100th Street, New York, NY 10029. |
ABSTRACT
Itching is a common complaint among patients infected with HIV and may cause
significant morbidity and embarrassment. Although idiopathic HIV-pruritus has
been described, it is probably less common than was previously thought. In most
patients, a careful history and physical examination will show that a dermatosis
accounts for their pruritus. Dry skin, seborrheic dermatitis, eczema, psoriasis,
pruritic papular eruption, staphylococcal folliculitis and prurigo nodularis
are frequently encountered in these patients. These common dermatoses, drug
eruptions, several rarer conditions and systemic causes of itching should be
excluded before diagnosing idiopathic HIV-pruritus. Treatment should be directed
to the underlying skin problem and may be supplemented with sedating antihistamines.
Phototherapy is a safe and effective therapeutic modality for many pruritic
dermatoses as well as for idiopathic pruritus.
KEY WORDS
Itching,
pruritus,
HIV
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