Psoriasis vs eczema: These two skin conditions may show similar symptoms
Psoriasis vs eczema: Here's how you can differentiate
"Eczema and psoriasis look very similar with red, itchy, scaly rashes but they are fundamentally different. A dermatologist can point out the differences," says Dr. Krishnamurthy.
Psoriasis is a chronic inflammatory autoimmune skin condition. It is a disease of epidermal hyperproliferation and decreased epidermal turnover. It makes skin cells to multiply up to 10 times faster than normal leading to build up of bumpy red patches covered with white scales.
Eczema means 'boil out'. The term denotes skin condition where skin turns red with eruptions containing liquid that oozes out. Genetic and environmental factors play an important role here.
Psoriasis: Most common in 15-35 years
Eczema: Most common in children where they present as atopic eczema which is a type of endogenous eczema. Among adults, exogenous eczema is commonly present as allergic contact dermatitis, irritant contact dermatitis, photodermatitis and infective dermatitis.
Triggers
For psoriasis: Pressure sites, seasonal variation- worsen in winter, stress, infections (URTI), certain medicine, alcohol and smoking
For eczema: Irritants (soap, detergents, and disinfectants), allergens (dust, pets, pollen, and dandruff), infections, stress, sweating, heat and humidity.
Clinical features
Psoriasis
- Present with symmetrical, red, well defined, scaly patches
- With silvery white scales
- Itching present but mild
- Sites- Elbows/ knees/ scalp, face, palms, soles, nails
- Different types- Guttate psoriasis, chronic plaque psoriasis, pustular psoriasis, exfoliative psoriasis, mucous membrane psoriasis, nail psoriasis and Psoriatic arthritis
Eczema
- Itching is a predominant symptom
- Acute stage- red papulovesicles, oozing patches with edema
- Subacute stage- Crusting and scaling
- Chronic - dry, rough and thickened
- Sites- Folds (inner elbow, behind knees, neck, wrists and ankles)
- Subacute stage patches are very similar to psoriatic patches
(Dr. Deepa Krishnamurthy, Consultant, Dermatologist, Columbia Asia Hospital Sarjapur Road)
Disclaimer: This content including advice provides generic information only. It is in no way a substitute for qualified medical opinion. Always consult a specialist or your own doctor for more information. NDTV does not claim responsibility for this information.
https://doctor.ndtv.com/skin/psoriasis-vs-eczema-heres-how-you-can-spot-the-difference-2323446
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