Chandelier
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
3400-word article in DER SPIEGEL about the interplay of psychology and skin health and the new and upcoming medical field of psychodermatology.
spiegel.de | archive
I‘ll post the different studies mentioned in the article below.
Machine translation from excerpts of the article:
spiegel.de | archive
I‘ll post the different studies mentioned in the article below.
Machine translation from excerpts of the article:
Stress can intensify the skin's innate tendency toward inflammation, the physician explains. She says she regularly sees this connection in people who have psoriasis or—like Vanessa—atopic dermatitis, also known as eczema. "That's why we treat the skin and the mind in parallel."
Eisenberg's patients receive more than just tablets, ointments, or light therapy. They also learn, for example through relaxation exercises, how to take better care of their emotional well-being. According to Eisenberg, the psychotherapy is "always highly individualized" and tailored to each patient's specific skin condition.
This approach exemplifies a modern way of understanding the skin.
An increasing number of experts share this perspective. It lies at the heart of an interdisciplinary branch of medicine known as psychodermatology. In the Journal of Dermatological Science, South Korean researchers recently observed: "The skin, traditionally regarded as an external barrier, is now considered a neuroendocrine organ capable of communicating with the central nervous system."
In other words, the skin receives signals from the brain and relays them by releasing cytokines—chemical messengers produced by the body. In this way, the brain and the skin can, in a sense, communicate with one another in an ongoing two-way conversation.
Researchers have identified what is effectively a communication pathway between these two organs, and they are uncovering more and more details about how it works. As soon as a person experiences an emotion, chemical messengers travel from the brain along nerve fibers that extend all the way into the skin, where they terminate. These nerve fibers, in turn, are connected to the immune system.
This is how worries and stress quite literally get under the skin: signals released at these nerve endings cause blood vessels to dilate and attract specific immune cells, which then attack the body's own tissue—leaving the skin inflamed.
"That helps explain why some people suddenly develop more severe eczema or acne before exams," says human biologist Steinhoff. Psychological stress can also trigger or worsen conditions such as rosacea and alopecia areata (patchy hair loss) in the same way.
Overall, physicians with training in psychosomatic medicine distinguish among three broad categories of skin disorders. The first comprises conditions that arise from psychiatric disorders, such as delusional infestation(formerly known as delusional parasitosis), in which people mistakenly believe that tiny creatures—for example, parasites—are living on or beneath their skin. As a result, they damage their skin through excessive scratching and overuse of soap or disinfectants.
A second category includes patients whose skin has been disfigured, for example by a tumor or a burn. Many of these individuals also bear profound psychological scars.
The third group consists of people whose skin conditions are exacerbated by psychological stressors such as chronic stress.
For some complex, chronic skin diseases, even expensive medications are not enough. "This is where psychodermatology can broaden the range of treatment options and improve therapy," says dermatologist Eva Peters of the Department of Psychosomatic Medicine and Psychotherapy at the University Hospital of Giessen.
There is a profound hope underlying these words: the growing understanding of the skin–brain axis may not only help keep the skin healthier than has previously been possible. It may also help alleviate psychological distress—and preserve mental acuity.
Only now are researchers beginning to understand how these connections might be explained. When the skin is under stress, it releases certain signaling molecules—cytokines—which appear to be capable of triggering inflammation in the brain. According to more recent studies, this may help explain why people with psoriasis are also at increased risk of developing depression.
Conversely, novel medications that inhibit these cytokines can not only reduce inflammation in the skin but may also alleviate depression and anxiety, according to Steinhoff.
For a long time, however, dermatologists overlooked the fact that emotional experiences can also alter the skin's overall condition. Yet there were early indications. In January 1995, a devastating earthquake struck Japan. In just 20 seconds, more than 5,000 people were killed, and over 300,000 residents lost their homes. For many, the disaster quite literally got under their skin: among those who had atopic dermatitis, physicians observed a striking finding. More than one-third of the survivors experienced a worsening of their itchy eczema after the catastrophe.
More recently, researchers from China reported in the journal Science that they believe they can now explain why stress promotes skin rashes. They have uncovered a previously unknown biological interaction.
The researchers began with the observation that some people with atopic dermatitis have elevated numbers of a particular type of immune cell—eosinophils—in their skin. Under normal circumstances, these cells defend the body against worms and other parasites. However, this immune response can spiral out of control, causing the cells to attack the body's own skin tissue and trigger inflammation. The researchers' own studies showed that the greater the number of these immune cells present in a patient's skin during a stressful situation, the more severe the rash became.
But why do some people accumulate so many of these immune cells under stress in the first place? The researchers found a clue in experiments involving mice with eczema. When the scientists placed the animals on a high platform without protective side barriers, the mice became stressed, and the condition of their skin subsequently worsened.
Further investigations revealed that this was due to a particular type of nerve cell in the skin. Once activated by signals from the brain, these nerve cells attracted eosinophils, which then released inflammatory signaling molecules, causing the skin to become inflamed.
Whether the same sequence of events occurs in humans remains uncertain. Nevertheless, the findings are consistent with much of what psychodermatology has uncovered so far: flare-ups of psoriasis or atopic dermatitis are often the body's response to psychological stress.