Various other things can irritate the skin and make atopic eczema flare up:
• cold weather
• dry air
• long car journeys
• sweating heavily; clothes or shoes that trap sweat may also cause problems
• dust mites, which can act as an irritant, even if not an allergen
• tobacco smoke
• solvents and other chemicals encountered at work
• skin contact with fruit (especially citrus), vegetables, and sometimes other foods. The spray generated by peeling potatoes can even produce eczema on the face.
Anything which increases blood flow through the skin makes the itching worse:
• heat, especially a hot bath or being too hot in bed
• anger or embarassment
• hot drinks of any kind
• coffee, tea and alcohol because of the drug-like substances they contain
• vinegar and spicy foods
• chocolate, soy sauce, yeast extract, orange juice, tomatoes and other foods that are rich in amines (see p. 200).
Various changes in the body can make the eczema worse:
• teething, in babies
• colds and other viral infections
• in women, certain phases of the menstrual cycle.
Many eczema sufferers are aware that their skin gets worse when they are upset, stressed or anxious Oust before examinations, for example). Like other allergic diseases, atopic eczema is not primarily psychological but, once it has begun, psychological factors can play quite a big part.
The good news…
…for children and teenagers, is that if you have eczema as a child, your chances of developing acne during your teens are greatly reduced.
Contact dermatitis too?
People with atopic eczema can develop contact dermatitis (see p. 54) in addition to their existing rash. There is always this risk with regularly applying creams to your skin, especially anything containing fragrance or lanolin. Antihistamine and antibiotic creams also carry this risk.
Even the ingredients in the creams prescribed for eczema – such as moisturisers and steroids – can sometimes provoke contact dermatitis. Creams are more likely to contain sensitising ingredients than ointments. Very occasionally, the sensitivity is to a preservative or emulsifier that is widely used in different ointments and creams, which means that switching brands yields no improvement. Steroid suspended in petrolatum (white paraffin jelly) is the least likely to cause reactions.
The rash produced by contact dermatitis looks no different from atopic eczema, so this sensitivity will be far from obvious. It will just seem as though the atopic eczema is not getting better.
Talk to your doctor if you think there may be a problem of this kind. He or she can check by using the suspect cream on one side of the body, and a different-but-equivalent product on the other side. Patch tests (see p. 92) may also help to identify contact sensitivity.
Diagnosis
There are five separate aspects to diagnosis:
1 Is this really atopic eczema? There are no clear-cut tests for atopic eczema. Instead the diagnosis is based on a ‘points system’ – how many of the typical features of atopic eczema are present? The doctor adds them up, and if there are enough, then it’s atopic eczema. Sometimes all the typical features are there and this is obviously the right diagnosis, but in other cases there may be room for doubt. The doctor should rule out the possibility of contact
dermatitis (see p. 54), especially if you have eczema only, or mainly, on the hands.
2 What avoidable irritants are making the skin worse?
3 Is the eczematous skin infected? The signs of infection are usually clear, but not always, especially with fungal infections. Steroid creams can sometimes mask the overt signs of infections: if atopic eczema is not responding to treatment this possibility should be investigated.
4 Are there any allergic reactions to those infections? Or to the normally harmless microbes that live naturally on the skin (see p. 17)? Skin-prick tests or blood tests can reveal such allergic reactions where fungi are concerned. Adults with persistent atopic, eczema which is getting worse rather than better are the most likely candidates.
5 Are there allergic reactions (or other sensitivity reactions) to food, or to allergens such as house-dust mite?
This fifth aspect of diagnosis is where controversy is rife. Many dermatologists feel that atopic eczema is treated quite adequately with moisturisers (emollients) and steroid creams. The search for allergic/sensitivity reactions – in other words, for basic causes – seems unnecessary for most patients, or more trouble than it is worth. Indeed, some dermatologists believe that looking for such sensitivity reactions is actually mistaken because they are not basic causes (see p. 42).
Other specialists disagree, and feel that allergic/sensitivity reactions are a basic causative factor in atopic eczema. They concede that there are many false positives, but in their opinion, there are enough true positives in the skin-prick test results to make it worth sorting them out from the false positives. Except for patients with very mild eczema, such doctors prefer to identify and eliminate the root causes, if possible.
Patch tests are now used by some of these doctors (see p. 69) – yet another contentious issue! The time-honoured use for patch tests is in contact dermatitis, and there is a lot of resistance to using them for atopic eczema. Traditionally, the immune reactions involved in atopic eczema and contact dermatitis are seen as entirely different – the former involving IgE and being a quick reaction (identified by skin-prick tests), the latter involving other players and
Sweaty sock dermatitis
More correctly known as ‘juvenile plantar dermatitis’, this rash on the feet affects an awful lot of atopic children. It is frequently misdiagnosed as athlete’s foot, and treated with anti-fungal drugs. The important clue can be found by looking between the toes: if there’s no rash there, then it is not athlete’s foot.
being much slower (identified by patch tests). New research into atopic eczema shows this view to be overly simple (see pp. 18-19) – and it provides a rational basis for using patch tests.
If, as a patient or a parent, you are keen to search for fundamental causes, remember that this should never displace treatments to quell infection or moisturise the skin and restore its protective structure. When these treatments are neglected the whole problem can get far worse, because of the vicious circles that sustain atopic eczema.
Treatment
Treatment for atopic eczema has five possible angles:
1 calming the inflammation
2 avoidance of scratching and rubbing
3 caring for the skin and restoring its normal structure
4 treating infections
5 avoiding allergens.
One or more of these aspects may be neglected, depending on what kind of specialist you are seeing.
Calming the inflammation
Steroid creams are the mainstay of atopic eczema treatment because they calm the inflammation in the skin. The creams do carry a risk of side effects, but are safe when used correctly (see p. 147). An over-fearful attitude to steroids creams can mean that the eczema never gets under control, and this can mean using more steroids in the long run. When treating an outbreak of atopic eczema with steroid cream, it is vital to continue applying the cream until the ‘hidden healing’ has occurred (see p. 146) – don’t stop as soon as the skin looks better.
Promising alternatives to steroid creams now exist: these are tacrolimus and pimecrolimus ointments (see p. 147). Unfortunately they are much more expensive, and your doctor will probably prescribe them only if there is some pressing reason.
Tar-based ointments have a much milder anti-inflammatory effect, and can be helpful for areas of thickened skin. They were once widely used for atopic eczema, but are used less now, in part because they stain fabrics and smell unpleasant. Sometimes they irritate the skin, too, and there are concerns about safety: they contain carcinogens, and significant amounts are absorbed into the bloodstream. However no evidence has been found that these cause cancer, despite intensive searching.
Antihistamine tablets are sometimes used and while they
may not help the eczema much, some evidence suggests that
they could reduce the risk of asthma developing later (see p. 249).
Powerful drugs such as cyclosporin are sometimes used in
severe cases of atopic eczema, to damp down the immune
response. They are taken by mouth, and can affect other parts of the body, not just the skin. Very careful monitoring is needed.
Sunlight is often beneficial, because it suppresses the inflammatory processes in the skin. However, not everyone improves with sun exposure – some get worse. Careful experimentation is the only way to find out: build up the length of sun exposure very gradually, starting with less than an hour a day.
Medical treatment with UV (ultraviolet) light can produce the same effect as sunshine and suppress inflammation. This treatment may be prescribed, but you should not try it for yourself with a sun-lamp. In PUVA treatment, a plant-derived substance called psoralen is given by mouth, or applied to the skin, to enhance the response to UV light.
Kicking the scratching habit
Scratching is a substantial part of the problem in long-standing atopic eczema. Experiments with healthy people and mechanical ’scratching machines’ show that perfectly normal skin will erupt into eczema if it is scratched intensively.
There is no steroid cream powerful enough to counteract the effects of scratching. But if scratching stops, then the skin can –with the help of medication – heal up.
Note that ’scratching’, in this case, includes rubbing the itch (directly or through clothes; using a hand, wrist, chin, leg, foot, or any other part of the body), touching or picking at the skin, rubbing against sheets, furniture or another person, or using a towel, flannel or hairbrush to rub the skin. All these activities can be habitual and quite unconscious, if atopic eczema has been present for more than a few months – you just don’t realise you’re doing it most of the time.
For many with atopic eczema, another problem creeps in –scratching without itching. This may be just habit, a response to boredom, stress or anxiety, or even part of the family dynamics, in which scratching has become a form of emotional expression. Scratching alone can set off itching, and a scratch-itch-scratch cycle ensues.
The first step in combating scratching (for an adult or older child) is simply to notice how often scratching occurs. Doctors at the Chelsea and Westminster Hospital in London issue their patients with little hand-held counting devices (tally-counters), and ask them to press the button on the device every time they scratch or rub. Over a period of days, patients discover – usually to their own amazement – just how often they do scratch. The point of the exercise is simply to become conscious of the scratching impulse, and to notice the situations which typically provoke scratching. You could use a small pocket-sized notebook and pencil to achieve the same end.
Once this awareness has been gained, then you are in a position to break the scratching habit. The methods involved –called ‘habit reversal’ – were first developed by a Swedish dermatologist, Peter Noren. It takes about 2-4 weeks for most people, but the change is long-lasting. Most eczema sufferers find that they recoup their time investment rapidly, once they are free from the chore of dealing with chronic eczema.
When you notice that you are about to start scratching, and before the urge to scratch overwhelms you, take control and do something deliberate with your hands – for example, clench your fists, while breathing deeply and slowly. Think cool non-itchy thoughts. The urge to scratch may pass. If it doesn’t, then you can allay the itch by pinching the itchy area gently, or pressing your fingernail into it, or lightly applying a little moisturiser.
In the bath or shower, don’t use flannels, and never rub or scrub the skin. Dry off by gently patting with a soft towel.
The aim is to get scratching episodes down to fewer than ten per day. In achieving this goal, relaxation exercises, stress management techniques, hypnotherapy or autogenic training (see p. 222) can also be very helpful, especially if you sometimes scratch in tense situations.
With small children, the parents have to do the noticing. Most are unaware just how much their child scratches or rubs the eczema – babies often rub against the side of the cot.
Once the awareness is there, a child over four can usually be taught the habit-reversal technique described above. With a younger child, the parents must distract the child when scratching is imminent, by talking or playing. If the child is scratching while asleep, parents should pick the child up and, very gently, hold the child’s hands away from the body. Situations and activities which commonly provoke scratching should be avoided, or planned for. Give the child something to hold while dressing and undressing, for example – keep the hands busy. But never say ‘Don’t scratch’ – it usually has the opposite effect in the long run.
For the first four days and nights, while you are trying to break the scratching habit, the child should never be alone, even for a minute – someone who is able to distract the child from scratching should always be there, and awake. Fortunately, children lose the habit far more quickly than adults.
Keep a child’s fingernails very short, and smooth them with an emery board too, so that if any scratching does occur the effects are minimised. (Soft cotton mittens, to be worn at night, are often recommended, but the cotton itself can be used to rub the skin – observe your child carefully! The same is true of all-over cotton suits.)
For this anti-scratching programme to be effective in healing the skin, there must be a determined effort with drug treatment at
Will it clear up?
Small children with eczema generally grow out of it by the age of two. Those who have eczema after this age tend to show a big improvement at puberty. Sometimes, however, the eczema can disappear at puberty, only to reappear later: so continue to be careful with your skin.
Atopic eczema is frequently the first sign of a tendency to allergies (see p. 22). Given this early warning sign, parents should take steps to avoid allergies developing, or at least reduce their severity (see pp. 244-9). One small piece of good cheer: atopic eczema and life-threatening food allergies are very rarely found together.
People with both asthma and atopic eczema frequently notice that when one improves the other seems to get worse. There is no explanation for this as yet.
Moisturisers - how to use them
Moisturisers (emollients) do two things: they increase the amount of water in the skin, and they lubricate the skin, making it less brittle.
A moisturiser is designed to leave an oily layer on the surface of the skin which stops the skin’s natural moisture from escaping. The most effective preparations, from this point of view, are ointments made from white paraffin, such as Vaseline, which form an uninterrupted waterproof layer: these are sometimes called occlusives. They contain no water, unlike creams. Although a cream forms a less formidable barrier to the escape of moisture from the skin, it does provide some moisture itself, which can soak into the skin.
The most important thing is to have something that you like using, so that you apply it regularly. There are lots of moisturisers available, so ask the doctor for different ones to try.
Applying moisturiser well is crucial:
• Apply moisturiser before your skin gets dry, as a preventive treatment.
• There’s no need to rub in your moisturiser (this can be a form of scratching). Just apply it very lightly.
• A thin layer is all that’s needed. A thick layer keeps in heat which aggravates the skin.
• Always apply within three minutes of a bath or shower.
• In addition, apply every 3-4 hours during the day. Carrying moisturiser around with you is helpful – get a small tube of moisturiser for this purpose.
• Ask the doctor to prescribe moisturiser in large quantities, to make sure you have enough. But beware of infecting big pots with Staphylococcus bacteria and then reinfecting your skin. Pump-action dispensers are safer.
Moisturiser can also be smeared onto bandages which are then wound around the affected areas at night to reduce the itch – or you can use ready-made ‘wet-wraps’ (ask your doctor about these). As long as the bandages/wraps are immovable, they will reduce nocturnal rubbing and scratching.
Avoid lotions, and any non-prescribed creams, as they could be irritating to the skin. Choose bath oils with care – some contain alcohol which is an irritant.
the same time. You should be using a steroid cream of sufficient strength, twice a day, and plenty of moisturising treatment.
By taking this ‘Combined Approach’, as Dr Christopher Bridgett and his colleages at the Chelsea and Westminster Hospital call it, you should be able to clear the eczema completely, even if you have had it for years and have tried innumerable different treatments. Once this has been achieved, you can maintain an eczema-free state by watching carefully for any outbreaks of itching, redness or roughness, and treating them immediately with a short course of steroid cream (see p. 146).
Skin care
Firstly, avoid all the irritants which you think may affect your skin. Give clothes an extra rinse cycle in the washing machine, to remove all detergent. or use a non-detergent system such as Eco-balls or Aquaballs. Wash all new clothes before wearing them, to remove chemicals such as formaldehyde. Wear soft cotton or silk next to the skin.
Where eczema affects the hands, special care is needed (see p. 57).
Water can be both good and bad for eczema. When you soak in a bath, water is absorbed by the skin cells, which helps correct the dryness of the skin. But when you get out of the bath, and the skin dries, the outermost layer shrinks and develops microscopic cracks, making it even less waterproof than it was before. The way around this is to apply a moisturiser immediately after a bath or shower –gently pat the skin until partially dry, and apply the moisturiser immediately to trap the water in the skin.
For anyone with a severe flare of eczema, current recommendations are:
• soak in lukewarm water for 20 minutes, twice a day
• pat dry
• quickly apply steroid cream to the eczematous areas, then moisturiser over the top, and to all other dry-skin areas
• make sure the moisturiser goes on within 3 minutes of emerging from the water.
This works well for some people, but not all. For a few eczema sufferers, the effect of taking natural oils out of the skin (which soaking does, to some extent) may outweigh the benefits of putting water in. Or they could be sensitive to something in the tap water – the chlorine, perhaps, or pollutants. It may not be obvious that this routine treatment is not helping. As Dr Michael Tettenborn, a British paediatrician with long experience of atopic eczema, observes: ‘By the time they’re referred to me, children are usually on the standard regimen of two-soaks-a-day. One of the first things I do, as an experiment, is tell the parents to just bathe them once a week and use a moisturiser and tissues to keep them clean the rest of the time. Some children do a lot better after that.