Irritant contact dermatitis



Irritant contact dermatitis


Nathaniel K. Wilkin


Evidence Levels:  A Double-blind study  B Clinical trial ≥ 20 subjects  C Clinical trial < 20 subjects  D Series ≥ 5 subjects  E Anecdotal case reports


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(Courtesy of Kalman Watsky, MD. From Bolognia, J.L., Jorizzo, J.L., Schaffer, J.V. (Eds.), Dermatology, third ed. pp. 249–259. © Elsevier.)


Irritant contact dermatitis (ICD) is the most common form of contact dermatitis and is defined as the reaction to an exogenous substance – the irritant – that damages the epidermis through physical or chemical mechanisms, triggering an innate immunological response only. Clinical manifestations of ICD vary in presentation and severity according to multiple factors: pre-existing status of the skin (atopy, barrier disruption, etc.), the nature and number of irritants (corrosives or caustic), the duration and frequency of contact, and the conditions of exposure (moisture, occlusion, temperature). Acute ICD is usually attributable to a single irritant. Chronic ICD usually results from exposure to multiple irritants, often in association with endogenous factors such as atopy or stress. Chronic cumulative ICD usually involves the hands.


ICD is common, often has a poor prognosis, has a significant economic impact on society, and seriously degrades the quality of life of affected individuals beyond the ability to work.



Management strategy


The first step in any management strategy is prevention. Patients should be educated about proper skin care and protection, including: hand washing, the use of moisturizers and barrier creams, avoidance of common irritants, and the use of protective clothing such as gloves and aprons when handling potentially irritating substances.


Dermatologists can encourage primary prevention by counseling patients at higher risk because of endogenous factors (e.g., atopy) or exogenous factors (e.g., frequent occupational exposures, such as in hairdressing). Secondary prevention includes measures that enable patients to remain employed without interfering with the resolution of the ICD. Chronic hand dermatitis is a common presentation of ICD, and patient education can be facilitated with a handout on lifestyle management principles directed at hand washing and moisturizing, occlusive moisturizing therapy at night, special protective modalities (such as type of glove to exclude specific irritants), and specific agents to avoid.


Azathioprine, cyclosporine, oral retinoids, psoralen and UVA (PUVA), Grenz ray therapy, and superficial radiotherapy may be justified for short-term control in patients who are compliant with moisturizing, use of protective modalities (gloves), and application of topical corticosteroids, and still have a severe disruption of their quality of life due to active ICD. Because the goal of these second- and third-line therapies is to reduce the severity such that first-line therapies may become sufficient, patient selection is critical.



Specific investigations











First-line therapies






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Aug 7, 2016 | Posted by in Dermatology | Comments Off on Irritant contact dermatitis

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