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Eczema Awareness Month + A Special Giveaway!

Another great post from itchylittleworld.com – Natural remedies for eczema to soothe your itchy little world..

These past few years have been a busy time for eczema and eczema research! From studies that prove atopic dermatitis is in fact an immune-driven disease (source) to a new FDA approved drug for moderate to severe eczema. We’re finally getting to the bottom of this difficult condition – but there is still so much work to be done!

October is Eczema Awareness Month and as always, we want to support the eczema community by sharing a variety of tips and resources!

Here are some of our most popular blog posts:

And from our Educational Eczema Series:

In honor of this month, we want our community to come together and help spread the word about eczema!

Here’s how YOU can get involved! Do these 2 things right now:

  1. Forward this blog post to anyone you know that suffers from eczema.
  2. Share this blog post on social media and help spread eczema awareness.

The Eczema Care Giveaway

The Eczema Company will also be hosting an AMAZING giveaway at the end of this month – so make sure to mark it on your calendar!

On October 23rd at 10AM the Eczema Care Giveaway will be launched, where one winner will win over $ 800 in eczema care prizes. Prizes will be donated by several experts such as:

  • The Paleo Mom
  • The Eczema Company
  • Holistic Squid
  • Natural Skin Dr.
  • Prime Physique Nutrition
  • Dermveda
  • The Allergista
  • And many more!!!!

Make sure to follow The Eczema Company on Facebook for updates and news about the giveaway!

Let’s come together and kiss eczema goodbye!

Eczema Awareness Month + A Special Giveaway! appeared first on itchylittleworld.com. Come read more about natural remedies for eczema!

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Key to chronic eczema itch may lie in special ion channel

Recently scientists reported the discovery of an “itch molecule” (Nppb)  responsible for conveying the itch signal across the synapse from sensory neurons in the skin to neurons in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord.

The media made a great deal of this study, which laid out a substantial model for how we feel itch.

Something I hadn’t noticed, though, was that the Science study considered only a subset of neurons involved in sensing itch—those that are activated by histamine. These neurons, at the itch-sensing end, have a type of ion channel called “TRPV1” that detects histamine and other substances, or “pruritogens,” that induce itch.

An ion channel is a kind of gate that opens when a key–such as a histamine molecule–binds to it. The open gate lets in sodium or potassium ions. When this happens to ion channels in a neuron, the neuron sends an electrical pulse down its length, transmitting information, such as a sensation of itch.

But there are other triggers for itch besides histamine. “Histamine-independent” itch is particularly important in the chronic itch experienced by eczema patients. (And that’s why antihistamines don’t do us any good.)

Histamine-independent itch is transmitted by neurons that possess TRPA1 ion channels. A new study, published in the Journal of Neuroscience, shows that mice only feel chronic itch if they have neurons expressing TRPA1 channels. Strikingly, the scientists show that knocking out TRPV1 channels (the histamine-dependent kind) does not affect the ability of mice to feel chronic itch.

As a model of chronic itch, the researchers shaved the cheeks of lab mice and exposed the skin to drying chemicals over a period of a few days. The mice scratched their cheeks and developed classic signs of dry, itchy skin–unless their TRPA1 channels had either been genetically deleted or inhibited by a drug,in which cases they hardly scratched at all.

The researchers were also interested in whether the itch-scratch cycle affected the sensation of itch. If you don’t scratch an itch, does it get better or worse? The answer appears to be that if you (or, by proxy, a lab mouse) have an itch on your back that you can only scratch by rubbing it against the wall, it may torment you, but when measured by objective standards, skin that you don’t scratch ends up in better shape.

We can draw two practical conclusions from this work, which was led by Diana Bautista at UC Berkeley: that blocking TRPA1 channels with a drug in cream or ointment form could be a potential solution to the chronic itch of eczema; and that it really does appear that if you can break the itch-scratch cycle, your skin will be better off.

Now, we all know how difficult it is to stop scratching. It’s not as easy as saying that you’ll stop. But this type of research certainly highlights the positive feedback of habit-reversal, which uses psychiatric techniques to reduce habitual scratching. Scratch less…and you’ll feel less itchy.

I do have one question: does the molecule Nppb, reported in the Science paper two weeks ago, transmit chronic itch signals as well as histamine-induced itch? If so, it is still a valuable target for further research into eczema therapies.
End Eczema

Pick Me Up Special Magazine

Hey guys,

It has taken me a while to get round to picking up (pun not intended) Pick Me Up Special magazine that came out on Thursday 26th March, but I thought I should mention it on the blog. I was approached by the magazine to reprint my eczema story from September 2013 as it was one of their favourites. I obliged, but told them that the previous print was incorrect as it stated that my doctor was happy with my steroid withdrawal, which of course is not the case. I told the editor that of course she could reprint the story, but only if she could do at least one of three things.

1. To change what was written as my doctor didn’t agree and it would be a horrific withdrawal
2. To include ITSAN somewhere in there or
3. To make my blog link more visible

I was pleased to see there had been a change. However the view of my doctor is no longer mentioned and apparently I say that I would go back onto steroids if my skin became bad, which of course is ludicrous because your skin has to be bad to withstand the effects of the withdrawal. My blog link is on the page, but not really that prominent, though the fact that I have one is mentioned within the text, so the reader may go on to find my blog. Who knows?

I wasn’t paid this time for my story but I hope it helps at least someone and in future I will ask to proof-read the story they write myself before it goes to print. I know they’re just doing their job and making it look interesting but it’d be nice if they could proclaim the whole truth and not include their own embellishments.

I Have Eczema