| Literature DB >> 26787146 |
Jackson Thomas, Christine F Carson, Greg M Peterson, Shelley F Walton, Kate A Hammer, Mark Naunton, Rachel C Davey, Tim Spelman, Pascale Dettwiller, Greg Kyle, Gabrielle M Cooper, Kavya E Baby.
Abstract
Globally, scabies affects more than 130 million people at any time. In the developed world, outbreaks in health institutions and vulnerable communities result in a significant economic burden. A review of the literature demonstrates the emergence of resistance toward classical scabicidal treatments and the lack of effectiveness of currently available scabicides in reducing the inflammatory skin reactions and pyodermal progression that occurs in predisposed patient cohorts. Tea tree oil (TTO) has demonstrated promising acaricidal effects against scabies mites in vitro and has also been successfully used as an adjuvant topical medication for the treatment of crusted scabies, including cases that did not respond to standard treatments. Emerging acaricide resistance threatens the future usefulness of currently used gold standard treatments (oral ivermectin and topical permethrin) for scabies. The imminent development of new chemical entities is doubtful. The cumulative acaricidal, antibacterial, antipruritic, anti-inflammatory, and wound healing effects of TTO may have the potential to successfully reduce the burden of scabies infection and the associated bacterial complications. This review summarizes current knowledge on the use of TTO for the treatment of scabies. On the strength of existing data for TTO, larger scale, randomized controlled clinical trials are warranted. © The American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26787146 PMCID: PMC4751955 DOI: 10.4269/ajtmh.14-0515
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Trop Med Hyg ISSN: 0002-9637 Impact factor: 2.345
Figure 1.Complications of scabies infection, modified from Engelman and others.3
An overview of classical treatments indicated for the management of scabies in Australia
| Drugs | Dosage | Treatment regimen | Contraindication | Disadvantages | Indicative cure rates | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Topical | ||||||
| Benzyl benzoate | 25% solution | One or several consecutive 24-hour applications | Pregnant women and infants | Burning or stinging, pruritus, dermatitis | 86% (72/86) | In use since 1930s; neurological complications with misuse; withdrawn in the European Union due to neurotoxicity concerns |
| Permethrin | 5% cream | Apply overnight (8–14 hour) then wash off | Infants aged < 2 months | Mild burning, itching stinging, pruritus, erythema, tingling, rash, diarrhea, persistent excoriation, dystonia (rare), | 96.3% (106/110) | In use since the 1980s; relatively expensive; growing resistance to scabies mites; poor compliance reported in mass community intervention programs |
| Sulfur | 2–10% precipitate in petroleum base | Apply for 24 hours, and then wash and reapply repeat applications for 3 days | – | Noxious, malodorous messy; not given as first-line agents; multiple applications required; can cause skin irritation | 96.9% (31/32) | Has been used for centuries; indicated in infants, pregnant and lactating women; inexpensive |
| Oral | ||||||
| Ivermectin | 200 μg/kg orally repeated after 1–2 weeks | – | Children < 15 kg; children aged < 5 years; pregnant or lactating women | Transient side effects: gastrointestinal disorders; pustular rash, cellulitis; abdominal pain, diarrhea, headache, vomiting, hypotension, toxic epidermal necrosis, mucosal drug eruption, fever, anorexia, lymph node swelling, eosinophilia, pain of joint and muscles, mazzotti reaction | 43.1% (28/65) | In use since 1980s (for the mass treatment of onchocerciasis, and filariasis); not approved for the treatment of typical scabies (except in Japan, Brazil, and France); only indicated if symptoms persists 3 weeks after application of benzyl benzoate or permethrin; no ovicidal activity, thus repeat treatment is required; one report of increased deaths |
Adapted from References.28–45
A partial summary of various plant-derived treatments used for the management of infectious dermatological conditions
| Botanicals | Pharmacological claims |
|---|---|
| Traditionally used for the management of scabies | |
| Management of fungi-associated skin diseases | |
| Antibacterial and antifungal properties | |
| Arborvitae ( | Treatment of verruca vulgaris |
| Beard lichen ( | Antibacterial activity against gram-positive bacteria |
| Crushed leaves used for the management of scabies | |
| Celandine ( | Treatment of warts |
| Antibacterial properties; treatment of inflammatory skin conditions with bacterial colonization | |
| Traditional oral remedies for warts | |
| Epigallocatechin gallate (standard green tea extract; Theaceae) | Management of external genital or perianal warts |
| Management of facial demodicosis | |
| Strong antifungal activities against a broad-spectrum funding including dermatophytes | |
| Activity against gram-positive bacteria and fungi | |
| Management of warts and scabies | |
| Garlic ( | Key active ingredient (ajoene) possess antifungal properties |
| Hyperforin ( | Antibacterial activity against gram-positive bacteria |
| Japanese herbal medicine (Kampo medicine) | Antibacterial against |
| Treatment of impetigo | |
| Lemon balm ( | Antiviral properties |
| Antibacterial, antifungal, and anti-inflammatory properties | |
| Treatment of scabies | |
| Antibacterial, antifungal, and antiparasitic properties | |
| Olibanum ( | Antibacterial activity against gram-positive bacteria |
| Treatment of ringworm | |
| Podophyllotoxin ( | Management of condyloma acuminata (anogenital wart) |
| Antibacterial activity against gram-positive bacteria | |
| Sage ( | Antibacterial activity against gram-positive bacteria |
| Treatment of scabies and tinea pedis | |
| Siberian ginseng ( | Traditional oral remedies for warts |
| Activity against bacterial, viral, fungal, and protozoal infections affecting skin | |
| Treatment of bacterial skin infections |
Adapted from References.67,68
Selected randomized controlled trials of TTO in dermatology
| Author, year, origin, design | Population and size | Results |
|---|---|---|
| Enshaieh and others, 2007, Iran, RCT | The treatment group (5%, TTO gel) was 5.8 times more effective than placebo ( | |
| Carson and others, 2001, AUS, RCT | In the treatment group (6% TTO gel), median time for reepithelialization was 9 days vs. 12.5 days for placebo ( | |
| Satchell and others, 2002, AUS, RCT | 5% TTO shampoo showed a 41% improvement in the severity score compared with 11% in the placebo group ( | |
| Dryden and others, 2004, AUS, RCT | TTO preparations (10% cream, 5% body wash) were more effective than chlorhexidine or silver sulfadiazine at clearing skin lesions | |
| Tong and others, 2007, AUS, RCT | Mycological cure rate was 64% in the 50% TTO group compared with 31% in the placebo group | |
| Barker and others, 2010, AU, RCT | The pediculicide-containing TTO and lavender oil (10% TTO and 1% lavender oil) showed 97.6% effectiveness (louse-free subjects) as opposed to 25.0% by the commercial product containing pyrethrins (1.65 mg/g) and piperonyl butoxide (16.5 mg/g) | |
| Blackwood and others, 2013, Ireland, RCT | TTO (5%) group showed no difference ( |
AUS = Australia; MRSA = methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus; TTO = tea tree oil.
Adapted from Carson and others,70 Barker and others,73 and Blackwood and others.74