Skin surface pH, stratum corneum hydration, trans-epidermal water loss and skin roughness related to atopic eczema and skin dryness in a population of primary school children

Authors

  • B Eberlein-König
  • T Schäfer
  • J Huss-Marp
  • U Darsow
  • M Möhrenschlager
  • O Herbert
  • D Abeck
  • U Krämer
  • H Behrendt
  • J. Ring

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1080/000155500750042943

Abstract

Non-invasive investigations of skin morphology and function are standard tools to study the pathophysiology of several cutaneous disorders, yet they have not been used in population-based epidemiological studies. Here we examined skin surface pH, stratum corneum hydration, trans-epidermal water loss (TEWL) and skin roughness by profilometry in a study population comprising 377 primary school children (8-9 years old) as part of a multicentre survey on risk factors for allergic diseases in school children. Skin surface pH showed significant higher values (p=0.029) in the group with atopic eczema (n=45) compared with the group without atopic eczema; all other parameters did not differ significantly between children with and without atopic eczema. With increasing skin dryness there was a significant increase in pH values (p=0.004). Stratum corneum hydration showed a significant decrease with increasing dryness (p<0.001). Measurement of skin roughness also revealed a significant linear relationship with skin dryness (p=0.02). It is concluded that measurement of skin surface pH, corneometry and profilometry are useful non-invasive techniques to objectively assess skin dryness in epidemiological studies regarding atopic skin disease.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Downloads

Published

2000-05-01

How to Cite

Eberlein-König, B., Schäfer, T., Huss-Marp, J., Darsow, U., Möhrenschlager, M., Herbert, O., Abeck, D., Krämer, U., Behrendt, H., & Ring, J. (2000). Skin surface pH, stratum corneum hydration, trans-epidermal water loss and skin roughness related to atopic eczema and skin dryness in a population of primary school children. Acta Dermato-Venereologica, 80(3), 188–191. https://doi.org/10.1080/000155500750042943

Issue

Section

Articles