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Approaching the Pruritic Patient

»What is the most common symptom of dermatologic disease?
»What is an “itch”?
»Is an itch a separate modality of pain or a submodality of pain?
»What causes an itch?
»Describe the difference between localized and generalized pruritus.
»What is the best approach to evaluation of a patient with localized pruritus?
»What are the common causes of localized pruritus?
»What is notalgia paresthetica?
»What is the physician’s best approach when seeing a patient with generalized pruritus?
»After obtaining a complete history and physical examination, what clinically oriented classification scheme should be followed?
»What are common causes of generalized pruritus?
»How prevalent is an underlying systemic disease in a patient who seeks medical attention for pruritus?
»What is “winter itch”? In which patient population is it common?
»The patient complains that “wool makes me itch” or “I am allergic to wool.” What disease does this patient probably have?
»What treatment should the physician consider if a patient presents with pruritus and “hives”?
»What disease should the physician consider if the patient volunteers that his spouse also suffers from itching?
»Is pruritus in HIV-infected patients common? What are the common causes of pruritus in these patients?
»Which psychiatric disorder often presents with intractable pruritus?
»Which patients with renal failure experience “renal itch”?
»Which patients with liver disease are most likely to experience pruritus? What is the best screening laboratory test?
»What are the common causes of cholestic pruritus?
»Which hematologic disorders are known to present with pruritus?
»Is generalized pruritus a common symptom of endocrine disorders?
»Can itching cause skin disease?
»What is the best symptomatic treatment for a patient with pruritus?

 
 
 

What are the common causes of cholestic pruritus?

The three most common causes of cholestic pruritus are primary biliary cirrhosis, cholestasis of pregnancy, and cholestasis from drugs. Pruritus affects virtually 100% of all patients with primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC) and is the initial symptom in 50%. PBC is a disease of unknown etiology characterized by the destruction of small intrahepatic bile ducts by a granulomatous reaction. Approximately 90% of the patients are female. The serum antimitochondrial antibody test against M2, a component of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex of mitochondrial enzymes, is 88% sensitive and 96% specific for PBC. Treatment is hepatic transplantation, and it completely eliminates the pruritus.

Benign cholestatic jaundice of pregnancy is a frequent cause of pruritus in pregnancy. The pruritus is most severe in the third trimester. The pruritus disappears and elevated liver function tests return to normal after delivery. Pruritus secondary to cholestasis frequently occurs with drug therapy. Common culprits include oral contraceptives, anabolic steroids, cephalosporins, chlorpropamide, cimetidine, erythromycin estolate, gold, nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs, nicotinic acid, penicillin, phenothiazine, phenytoin, progestin, and tolbutamide. Removal of the offending drug usually leads to resolution of symptoms. Other causes of cholestatic pruritus include primary sclerosing cholangitis, obstructive choledocholithiasis, carcinoma blocking the biliary tree, or chronic hepatitis C.

Mela M, Mancuso A, Burroughs AK: Review article: pruritus in cholestatic and other liver diseases, Aliment Pharmacol Ther 17:857– 870, 2003.