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Role of Inflammation and Cytokine Dysregulation in Depression in Patients with Inflammatory Skin Conditions. | LitMetric

Role of Inflammation and Cytokine Dysregulation in Depression in Patients with Inflammatory Skin Conditions.

Am J Clin Dermatol

Psychiatry, College of Medicine/CMU Medical Education Partners Saginaw, Central Michigan University, Saginaw, MI, USA.

Published: December 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Psychodermatology examines how skin and mental health issues relate, especially in patients with inflammatory skin conditions and depression.
  • The review identifies a strong connection between proinflammatory cytokines involved in skin diseases and depressive symptoms, suggesting shared biological pathways.
  • Co-managing skin and psychiatric disorders through interdisciplinary approaches can improve patient outcomes and necessitates further research into these links for potential new treatments.

Article Abstract

The growing field of psychodermatology examines the interplay between dermatological and psychiatric comorbidities. While current literature recognizes that cutaneous and psychiatric conditions often coexist within patients, the relationship between dysregulated inflammation and depression in patients with inflammatory skin conditions has not been thoroughly explored. This review seeks to describe the connection between cutaneous disease and depression via shared inflammatory cytokine pathways. A review of current literature was conducted, and studies addressing the co-occurrence of depression and inflammatory skin diseases were included. This review focuses on depression in patients with psoriasis, atopic dermatitis, and hidradenitis suppurativa. Studies that focused on the prevalence of depression in these populations, shared inflammatory pathways, and co-management of cutaneous and psychiatric disorders were chosen. The literature revealed a high prevalence of depression in individuals with inflammatory skin conditions compared with those without cutaneous disease. Recent studies described how proinflammatory cytokines in inflammatory skin diseases can elicit inflammation in the brain, leading to depressive symptoms. Certain subsets of cytokines that mediate inflammatory pathways were associated with both cutaneous inflammation and depression, highlighting shared pathology. Antiinflammatory medications targeting shared cytokines found reductions in both cutaneous and depressive symptoms. Practitioners have emphasized interdisciplinary approaches to treating both conditions, including psychotherapy and pharmacological methods. There is a clear association between inflammatory cutaneous diseases and depression. Co-management of these conditions, including interdisciplinary methods, is essential for patients' well-being. Future research addressing similar links between other cutaneous and psychiatric conditions could yield new treatment opportunities as well.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s40257-024-00905-9DOI Listing

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