Karolinska Institutet
Browse

Atopic dermatitis and distress

Download (1019.01 kB)
thesis
posted on 2024-09-02, 22:09 authored by Saly Mustafa Mohamed Abdelhadi

Atopic dermatitis (AD) is a chronic, inflammatory skin condition characterized by itching, redness, and skin lesions, affecting approximately 10–20% of children and 1–3% of adults worldwide. Distress associated with AD can negatively impact quality of life, work, and daily activities.

The research aims were to explore the role of stress in AD patients and to further investigate brain activity during stress in AD patients compared with controls. Further, one possible mediator related to skin inflammation and stress, calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP), was studied in skin from AD patients and controls, and related to psychodemographic measurements.

The initial parts of the project involved focus groups with patients and an online survey. Results from the focus group study and the survey study underlined the importance of stress as a trigger and worsening factor for patients with AD. Both studies indicated that stress, especially chronic stress, could be an important worsening factor. Decision-making and unforeseen events were often mentioned as stress triggers. In both the focus groups and the survey study, patients rated stress as of greater importance than climate factors. Itch was reported to be a result of stress and the type of stress possibly affected the nature of the pruritus experienced by patients. Furthermore, physical exercise was reported to have beneficial effects, something that was found in both the focus groups and the survey.

Differences were found in possible mechanisms for stress processing in AD patients compared with controls. Reduced deactivation in the default mode network in response to stress (an arithmetic test) indicated that there is likely a cognitive functional variability in AD patients compared with healthy control subjects, manifested as lowered inhibition ability under psychological stress. This was also supported by different correlations between brain activities and various psycho-demographic data. Findings from a functional magnetic resonance imaging study indicated that psychological stress affected brain activities in the motor cortex, the somatosensory association cortex, and perception and sensory integration processing among AD patients.

An immunohistochemical study showed an increase of CGRP in nerve-like fibers and inflammatory cells in inflamed skin of AD patients compared with non-lesional skin. The increase of CGRP-positive nerve-like fibers in skin correlated with depressive and anxiety scores in the patients.

The results showed that psychological stress was an important trigger factor for AD and both differences in central processing of stress in AD and peripheral changes in CGRP levels in skin were observed. This emphasizes the importance of a holistic approach to treatment of AD, with the possibility for healthcare to offer more individualized treatment depending on each patient’s challenges and needs.

List of scientific papers

I. Lönndahl L, Abdelhadi S, Holst M, Lonne-Rahm SB, Nordlind K, Johansson B. Psychological stress and atopic dermatitis: A focus group study. Ann Dermatol. 2023 Oct;35(5):342-347.
https://doi.org/10.5021/ad.22.035

II. Abdelhadi S, Nordlind K, Holst M, Lönndahl L. Atopic dermatitis and distress – an inquiry study. [Manuscript]

III. Jonsson T, Li T-Q, Abdelhadi S, Lönndahl L, Theodorsson E, Nordlind K. Atopic dermatitis and stress - A functional MRI study of female patients with atopic dermatitis using an arithmetic task. [Submitted]

IV. Abdelhadi S, Nordlind K, Johansson B, Theodorsson E, Holst M, Lönndahl L. Expression of calcitonin gene-related peptide in atopic dermatitis and correlation with distress. Immunopharmacol Immunotoxicol. 2023 Sep 7:1-6.
https://doi.org/10.1080/08923973.2023.2253988

History

Defence date

2023-12-04

Department

  • Department of Medicine, Solna

Publisher/Institution

Karolinska Institutet

Main supervisor

Lönndahl, Louise

Co-supervisors

Nordlind, Klas; Jonsson, Tomas; Holst, Mikael; Johansson, Björn

Publication year

2023

Thesis type

  • Doctoral thesis

ISBN

978-91-8017-200-4

Number of supporting papers

4

Language

  • eng

Original publication date

2023-11-10

Author name in thesis

Abdelhadi, Saly Mustafa

Original department name

Department of Medicine, Solna

Place of publication

Stockholm

Usage metrics

    Theses

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Keywords

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC