| Literature DB >> 32093459 |
Paraskevi Mavrogiorgou1, Corinna Mersmann1, Gabriele Gerlach2, Stephan Herpertz2, Georg Juckel1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The few psychodermatological studies of primary psychiatric populations so far suggest that parasitic-infectious skin diseases are the most common dermatological comorbidity in more than 70% of psychiatric patients, which should be studied here in a large data bank outside dermatological treatment facilities.Entities:
Keywords: Depression; Psychiatric disorders; Psychodermatology; Skin diseases
Year: 2020 PMID: 32093459 PMCID: PMC7046994 DOI: 10.30773/pi.2019.0193
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychiatry Investig ISSN: 1738-3684 Impact factor: 2.505
Figure 1.Flow diagram to identify patients groups being comorbid with psychiatric and dermatological disorders.
Figure 2.Frequency of psychiatric disorders (ICD-10: F00–F99).
Figure 3.Frequency of dermatological disorders.
Frequency and type of infectious-parasitic dermatoses in mentally ill patients
| Total sample | Bacterial | Viral | Funcal | Parasitic |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| n=12 (42.9%) | n=4 (14.3%) | n=11 (39.3%) | n=1 (3.6%) | |
| Subforms | Erysipel: n=9 (pathogens: ß-hämolytic streptococcus of the Group A | Herpes Zoster: n=2 (pathogens: Varizellen-Zoster-Virus) | Candidosis | Scabiosis: n=1 (pathogens: Mites) |
| • Intertriginous: n=3 | ||||
| • Cutan+oral mucosa: n=3 (pathogens: Yeast Candida albicans) | ||||
| Phlegmone: n=2 (pathogens: Streptococci/staphylococci) | Herpes oralis: n=1 (pathogens: Herpes-simplex Virus) | Tinea | ||
| • Pedis: n=2 | ||||
| • Manuum+pedum: n=2 (pathogens: Trichophyton or Microsporum) | ||||
| Pyodermia: n=1 (pathogens: ß-hämolytic streptococci, staphylococcus aureus) | Condylomata acuminata: n=1 (pathogens: Papillomavirus) | Pityriasis versicolor: n=1 (pathogens: Yeast Malassezia furfur) |