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treatmentdurg Female, United States

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Treatment and medicine

Written by treatmentdurg on February 6, 2012

Medical treatment for vitiligo isn't forever compulsory. For some, skin color proceeds without treatment. For others, self-care steps, such as using sunscreen and applies cosmetic cover-up oil, may improve the look of your skin. For fair-skinned persons, avoid tanning can make the areas almost unremarkable.

 

Depending on the figure, size and position of the white patches, you may decide to seek medical treatment. Medical treatments for vitiligo aim to even out skin tone, either by restoring color (pigment) or by destroy the left behind color.

 

Treatment for vitiligo may take as long as six to 18 months, and you may have to try more than one treatment before you find the one that works best for you.

 

Medical therapies

 

relevant corticosteroid therapy. Corticosteroids may assist return color to your skin (repigmentation), particularly if the medication is started early in the disease. Milder relevant corticosteroid anti vitiligo oil may be arranged for children and for people who have large areas of depigmented skin. It may take as long as three months of treatment before you begin to see any changes in your skin's color. This treatment is easy and successful, but your doctor needs to watch you closely for side effects, such as thinning of the skin (atrophy) and streaks or lines on your skin (skin striae). Calcipotriene (Dovonex), a vitamin D derivative, also may be used topically and is at times used with corticosteroids or ultraviolet light.

Topical immunomodulators. Topical ointments containing tacrolimus or pimecrolimus are effective for people with small areas of depigmentation, especially on the face and neck. This treatment may have fewer side effects than corticosteroids and can be used in combination with ultraviolet B (UVB) treatments. However, studies conducted on these treatments have been small, and there is concern that they may be associated with an increased risk of lymphoma and skin cancer.

Relevant psoralen plus ultraviolet A (PUVA). This option, which is also called photo chemotherapy, may be effective for you if less than 20 percent of your body has regimented patches. You'll have to visit the doctor once or double a week for treatment. Your doctor or nurse applies a thin coating of the topical psoralen about 30 minutes before the light exposure. Psoralen makes your skin more sensitive to ultraviolet light. Your skin is then exposed to UVA light, which turns the treated areas pink. As the skin heals, a more normal skin color appears.

 

A variation is known as water bath PUVA, in which you lie in a tub of water containing psoralen for 15 minutes before you're exposed to the light.

 

Possible side effects include severe sunburn and blistering, though you can minimize your risk of complications by avoiding direct sunlight after each treatment. Hyper pigmentation — over darkening of the skin — is usually temporary and eventually lightens when treatment stops.

 

Oral psoralen photo chemotherapy (oral PUVA). If you have regimented areas that cover more than 20 percent of your body, your doctor may recommend oral psoralen. For this treatment, you take the oral psoralen about two hours before exposure to UVA light. You'll have to visit the doctor two or three times a week, allowing for at least a day in between treatments. As with topical psoralen, the treated skin becomes pink after UVA exposure, and then eventually fades to a more normal skin tone.

 

This treatment can also be done using natural sunlight if you don't have access to a doctor's office with the proper equipment. Your doctor will let you know how much exposure you need and will want to monitor your skin changes frequently.

 

Sunburn, nausea, vomiting, itching, abnormal hair growth and over darkening of the skin are potential short-term side effects of this treatment, whether it's done in the doctor's office or using natural sun. Your danger of skin cancer may be increased if you use this therapy long term. Oral PUVA is not recommended for children under 10 due to a greater danger of damage to the eyes, such as cataract.

 

You can trim down your odds of skin cancer and suntan by staying out of direct sunlight for one to two full days after treatment. The use of sunscreen can also help reduce your risk of side effects. To protect your eyes from serious spoil, such as cataracts, wear UV-protective sunglasses for up to 24 hours after each treatment when you're exposed to the sun.

 

Narrowband ultraviolet B (UVB) therapy. Narrowband UVB, a special form of UVB light that use a more specific wavelength of ultraviolet B, is an other to PUVA. This type of therapy can be administered like PUVA and given up to three times a week. However, no pre-application of psoralen is essential, which simplifies the treatment process. Because it is simpler to administer, this type of phototherapy is gaining wide acceptance. However, more research is needed to determine if it is superior to PUVA and to assess its long-term safety. Narrowband wavelengths of light can also be delivered to smaller areas of vitiligo using either an intense light source (focal) or a laser. Small trials have shown positive results. However, due to the added expense of these devices they may not be available in all dermatologists' offices.

Excimer laser. This type of laser deliver controlled beams of a specific wavelength of UVB light to the skin. It can be used only on small areas of vitiligo, and it's often used in combination with topical drugs. Side effects can include redness and blistering.

Regimentation. Regimentation may be an option for you if you have vitiligo that covers more than half of your skin. Regimentation therapy lightens the unaffected parts of your skin to match the areas that have previously lost color. For this treatment, you apply medicine call monobenzone ether of hydroquinone twice a day to the areas of your skin that still have pigment. Treatment continues until the darker area of your skin matches the already-regimented areas.

 

Redness and swelling are potential side effects of depigmentation therapy, and you have to be cautious to avoid skin-to-skin contact with other people for at least two hours after you've applied the drug, so you don't transfer it to them. Other potential side effects include itching and dry skin. Depigmentation is undeviating and will make you extremely sensitive to sunlight permanently.

 

Surgical therapies

 

Autologous skin grafts. This type of skin graft uses your own tissues (autologous). Your doctor removes tiny pieces of skin from one area of your body and attaches them to another. This method is sometimes used if you have small patches of vitiligo. Your doctor removes very small sections of your normal, pigmented skin, often containing a small hair, and places them on areas that have lost pigment. Possible complications include scarring, a cobblestone appearance, patterned pigmentation or failure of the transferred skin to repigment.

Blister grafting. In this procedure, your doctor creates blisters on your pigmented skin, primarily by using suction. The tops of the blisters are removed and transplanted where a blister of equal size has been created and removed in an area that has no pigment. Blister grafting may cause a cobblestone appearance and scarring, and the area may not repigment. However, there's less risk of scarring with this procedure than with other types of skin grafting.

Tattooing (micropigmentation). Tattooing implant pigment into your skin with a special surgical instrument. For the treatment of vitiligo, tattooing is most effective around the lips and in people with dark skin. Sometimes the tattoo color doesn't match skin color closely enough. as well, tattoo colors fade and they don't tan.

Experimental therapies

Doctors are enduring to try to find better ways to treat vitiligo. One newer option is a procedure called an autologous melanocyte transplant. Using a sample of your normal skin, researchers can grow melanocytes in the lab. These newly developed melanocytes are then transplanted to the areas on your body that lack pigment. This treatment is still considered experimental and isn't widely available.

 

Another treatment in growth uses a compound found in black pepper called piperine. In trials on mice, piperine was found to be effective at causing repigmentation. Piperine was even more effective when it was used in combination with UV light. Redness and skin peeling were temporary side effects of this treatment.

 

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treatmentdurg

is a girl that lives in United States. She joined Dipdive on February 6, 2012. The last time she logged in was on February 6, 2012.