Document detail
ID

oai:pubmedcentral.nih.gov:1182...

Topic
Research Article
Author
Zarnowski, Julia Kage, Paula Treudler, Regina
Langue
en
Editor

Dustri-Verlag Dr. Karl Feistle

Category

Allergologie Select

Year

2025

listing date

2/19/2025

Keywords
self-initiated delayed ciu impairments significantly patients changes dietary associated urticaria disease control
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Abstract

Background: Chronic idiopathic urticaria (CIU) is common in allergological practice.

Although therapeutic options have improved in the past decade, patients still suffer from a significant burden of disease and are often treated insufficiently.

Objective: We aimed at analyzing the psychiatric comorbidities, social impairments, and treatment gap in a real-world setting.

Materials and methods: Adult patients with CIU were investigated for demographical data, medical history, and psychosocial burden.

Validated questionnaires were used to assess urticaria activity, control of disease, quality-of-life impairment, and psychiatric comorbidities.

Results: 82 patients (78% female; 47.5 ± 14.8 years) were included.

65.9% had insufficient disease control, 11% reported on prior self-medication with drugs, 19.5% were seeking help from non-academic medicine, and 54.9% tried a change of diet.

The use of non-academic treatment was significantly associated with higher disease activity.

Self-initiated dietary changes were significantly associated with less control of disease.

Delayed referrals to a urticaria-specialized center were significantly linked to self-reported psychiatric diseases, self-medication with drugs and self-initiated dietary changes.

Conclusion: Our data show an unsatisfactory control of CIU in many patients and substantial psychosocial impairments which are also associated with a delayed referral to urticaria centers, self-initiated non-academic treatments, and dietary changes.

Zarnowski, Julia,Kage, Paula,Treudler, Regina, 2025, Substantial psychosocial impairments in patients with chronic urticaria are associated with delayed referral to urticaria centers, non-academic treatments, and dietary changes, Dustri-Verlag Dr. Karl Feistle

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