DocumentCode
2766491
Title
The Traditional Chinese Medicine syndromes of psoriasis in Chinese patients: Contribution of demographic and clinical variables
Author
He, Zehui ; Lu, Chuanjian ; Ou, Aihua
Author_Institution
Guangdong Provincial Hosp. of Traditional Chinese Med., Guangzhou, China
fYear
2011
fDate
12-15 Nov. 2011
Firstpage
765
Lastpage
768
Abstract
This article was to examine the specific contribution of demographic, medical and psychological variables to the Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) Syndromes of psoriasis. A cross-sectional survey of psoriasis patients was conducted at 7 hospitals of TCM of different regions. In all, 671 psoriasis patients underwent a clinical assessment including differentiation of TCM syndromes and psoriasis severity (assessed by Psoriasis Area and Severity Index, PASI). Patients also completed questions on demographic data and a quality of life scale (Dermatology Life Quality Index, DLQI). The three main TCM syndromes were included: 354 patients with Wind-heat (52.8%), 161 with Blood-stasis (24.0%), and 156 with Blood-dryness (23.2%). They distributed differently in subgroups of patients with different gender, age, chronic disease, duration of psoriasis, PASI, and DLQI score. The TCM syndromes were close related to demographic and clinical conditions of patients. TCM clinical treatment should consider both characteristics of syndrome and demographic variables of psoriasis.
Keywords
blood; demography; diseases; patient treatment; skin; surveying; age; blood-dryness; blood-stasis; chinese patients; chronic disease; clinical treatment; clinical variables; cross-sectional survey; demographic variables; medical variables; psoriasis; severity index; traditional chinese medicine syndromes; wind heat; Analysis of variance; Diseases; Heating; Hospitals; Indexes; Skin; Tongue; Psoriasis; Traditional Chinese Medicine; syndrome;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Bioinformatics and Biomedicine Workshops (BIBMW), 2011 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
Atlanta, GA
Print_ISBN
978-1-4577-1612-6
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/BIBMW.2011.6112468
Filename
6112468
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