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1.
Chinese Journal of Dermatology ; (12): 122-126, 2021.
Article in Chinese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-885185

ABSTRACT

Objective:To analyze clinical characteristics of ketosis-associated prurigo pigmentosa after ketogenic diet and bariatric surgery.Methods:Clinical data were collected from patients with ketosis-associated prurigo pigmentosa, who were diagnosed and treated in Department of Dermatology, Peking University People′s Hospital from September 2018 to September 2020. The clinical characteristics, sequelae and therapeutic effect of dietary modification were analyzed and summarized.Results:A total of 6 patients with ketosis-associated prurigo pigmentosa were collected, including 5 females who developed prurigo pigmentosa after ketogenic diet, and 1 male who developed prurigo pigmentosa after bariatric surgery. The skin lesions mainly involved the chest, back, waist and abdomen, and rarely involved the eyelids, axillae, elbows and mons pubis. Common skin lesions included urticaria-like erythema, papules and pigmentation arranged in a reticular distribution, and rare skin lesions included mung bean- to soybean-sized blisters, whose walls were liable to break. Among 5 patients undergoing routine urine analysis, 4 were positive (from + to ++++) for ketone bodies in the urine, and 3 were positive for urinary protein (+) . Pathological examination in 2 patients showed epidermal spongiosis, scattered necrotic keratinocytes, basal cell liquefaction, lymphocyte infiltration in the superficial dermis, and erythrocyte extravasation. The 6 patients were advised to eat staple foods. After dietary modification, 5 patients were nearly cured within 1 week; 1 patient, who continued ketogenic diet for weight loss, still received marked improvement after the treatment with minocycline at a dose of 100 mg/d in spite of restriction of carbohydrate intake. The levels of urinary ketone bodies and urinary protein in the 6 patients all returned to normal within 1 week after treatment.Conclusions:Ketosis plays an important role in the occurrence of prurigo pigmentosa. Dietary modification alone or adjuvant medical treatment such as minocycline is effective for the treatment of ketosis-related prurigo pigmentosa.

2.
Chinese Journal of Epidemiology ; (12): 378-372, 2002.
Article in Chinese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-244257

ABSTRACT

<p><b>OBJECTIVE</b>To determine the percentage of hypercholesterolemic patients who had met the criteria as total cholesterol (TC) and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C), defined by the Chinese National Recommendations for Prevention and Treatment of Dyslipidemia.</p><p><b>METHODS</b>Adult patients with hypercholesterolemia, who had been receiving the same lipid-lowering therapy for at least 2 months, were enrolled. Lipid levels were determined at the time of enrollment, to assess whether the patients' lipid levels had reached the criteria for treatment. Patients' cardiovascular risk factors and lipid-lowering treatments were also collected.</p><p><b>RESULTS</b>One hundred and eighty patients with mean age of 65.8 were studied. Of these, 6.7% had no risk factors and no definite disease of atherosclerosis (low-risk group), 65.5% had risk factors but no documented atherosclerosis (high-risk group), and 27.8% had established atherosclerosis diseases or diabetes mellitus. Overall, only 44% of patients achieved both TC and LDL-C target levels. The success rates were higher among low and high-risk groups than that among patients with atherosclerosis or diabetes mellitus. The relationship between four different lipid-lowering drug therapies and successful patient outcome was also investigated. The success rates were 51.8% for simvastatin, 42.9% for pravastatin, 31.6% for fluvastatin, 12.5% for other drugs respectively.</p><p><b>CONCLUSION</b>More than half of the hypercholesterolemic patients receiving lipid-lowering therapy had not achieved TC and LDL-C target levels. Data from this study indicated that a significant gap still existed between dyslipidemia prevention principles and clinical practices, suggesting that more aggressive treatment of dyslipidemia is needed.</p>


Subject(s)
Aged , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Anticholesteremic Agents , Therapeutic Uses , Cholesterol , Blood , Cholesterol, LDL , Blood , Hypercholesterolemia , Blood , Drug Therapy
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