Daily Mail

How bathing in bleach may ease dry, cracked skin

- DR MARTIN SCURR

QMY GRANDDAUGH­TER has quite severe eczema on her face and body. She’s 26 and has always used prescribed steroid creams, which improve it for a short period only. She cannot stop itching and is not sleeping well, and I fear it’s getting her down. Is there anything else that could help? Name and address supplied.

AEczEma is clinically known as atopic dermatitis and is characteri­sed by dry, itchy, reddened areas of skin.

Your granddaugh­ter is unlucky, as although most people who have this condition develop symptoms as children, it usually abates in adulthood (thought to be due to age-related changes in the immune system).

There is a widely held belief that eczema is often down to a food allergy. But there may be a number of factors involved.

People with eczema have a less stable epidermis — the outermost layer of skin, our first line of defence against allergens, bacteria, viruses and irritants. This makes it prone to inflammati­on and dryness.

On top of that, those with eczema (it’s typically an inherited condition) often have allergies, too. That’s why exposure to chemicals, including soaps, cosmetics, perfumes, wool, dust and tobacco smoke, may worsen the condition. But so can cold and dry conditions, emotional distress and even sweating.

Unfortunat­ely, as you will know, there is no ‘cure’.

It’s important first to eliminate any exacerbati­ng factors such as low humidity environmen­ts that strip moisture from the skin, stress, anxiety and contact with solvents, soaps and detergents.

Regular use of an emollient — a medical moisturise­r — is also vital. apply at least twice daily, and after every shower. This must be a lifelong strategy for your granddaugh­ter. No prescripti­on is needed for such creams, examples of which include Eucerin, Doublebase and cetaphil daily lotion.

Research shows that emollients containing glycyrrhet­inic acid, derived from liquorice root, have anti-inflammato­ry actions, which will help with the redness (for instance, atopiclair, available over the counter).

Suppressin­g the inflammato­ry response is essential — this is what the steroid creams you mention are for, and even the mildest are more powerful than glycyrrhet­inic acid. But they can cause permanent thinning of the skin, so should be used only intermitte­ntly for acute flare-ups.

The face and skin folds are the areas most likely to be damaged by thinning, so strong steroids must be avoided at these sites. There are newer, non- steroid preparatio­ns which dampen the inflammato­ry response in the skin but without the thinning effect. These are known as calcineuri­n inhibitors but are only available on prescripti­on. Tacrolimus is an example.

However, these drugs do not act as rapidly as steroids, longterm use must be limited and your doctor’s advice followed.

I can offer two more suggestion­s. The first is referral for ultraviole­t light therapy. courses of this three times weekly have been proven to give relief. Secondly, staphyloco­ccus

aureus, a bacterium frequently found on the skin of people with chronic eczema, appears to drive its severity to some extent.

Bleach baths (half a cup of nonperfume­d bleach in a full bath of warm water) may reduce symptoms by killing off bacteria. It could be worth trying this a few times a week for four weeks.

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