Pruritus
Basics
Basics
Basics
Description
Description
- Unpleasant yet common sensation that provokes a desire to scratch
- Chronic if persisting for more than 6 wk (incidence increases with age)
- Generally accepted to be mediated by unmyelinated C-fibers in upper portion of dermis (distinct from those for pain):
- Transmitted to dorsal horn of spinal cord
- Via spinothalamic tract to cerebral cortex
- Peripheral mediators (e.g., histamine and peptides such as substance P that release histamine) stimulate C-fibers and induce itching
- Prostaglandins (PGE2, PGH2) lower threshold to pruritus
- Opiates cause pruritus by acting on central receptors
- No single pharmacologic agent effectively treats all causes of pruritus
- “Itch–scratch–itch” cycle:
- Itching triggers scratching
- Scratching damages skin and stimulates nerve endings, thereby producing even greater itching
Etiology
Etiology
- Dermatologic causes
- Neurologic causes: Due to CNS or PNS lesions
- Psychogenic causes
- Systemic causes
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