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Pilot Studies on Two Complementary Bath Products for Atopic Dermatitis Children: Pine-Tar and Tea

Background: Few standardized bath product clinical trials were performed for atopic dermatitis patients. Pine-tar and green tea extracts are plant-derived products that have been described as having anti-allergic effects which may reduce AD disease severity. Methods: The efficacy of two complementar...

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Autores principales: Hon, Kam Lun, Ng, Wing Gi Gigi, Kung, Jeng Sum C., Leung, Ping Chung, Leung, Ting Fan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6473907/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30626074
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/medicines6010008
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author Hon, Kam Lun
Ng, Wing Gi Gigi
Kung, Jeng Sum C.
Leung, Ping Chung
Leung, Ting Fan
author_facet Hon, Kam Lun
Ng, Wing Gi Gigi
Kung, Jeng Sum C.
Leung, Ping Chung
Leung, Ting Fan
author_sort Hon, Kam Lun
collection PubMed
description Background: Few standardized bath product clinical trials were performed for atopic dermatitis patients. Pine-tar and green tea extracts are plant-derived products that have been described as having anti-allergic effects which may reduce AD disease severity. Methods: The efficacy of two complementary bath products was studied and compared. Efficacy and acceptability of the bath products were measured by patient general acceptability of treatment (GAT: very good, good, fair or poor), disease severity (SCORAD: SCoring Atopic Dermatitis), quality of life (CDLQI: Children Dermatology Life Quality Index), and pertinent clinical parameters were measured before and after four weeks of treatment. Sample size calculations for further clinical trials were performed. In one group, nine AD patients were subjected to bathing with a pine-tar bath oil for 10–15 min daily for four weeks. In another group, 20 AD subjects bathed with a teabag containing green tea extracts for four weeks. Results: Significant improvements in clinical- and patient-orientated parameters were found in the pine-tar bathing group, but not the tea-bag bathing group. Both groups reported very good/good GAT on the studied products. Teabag bathing was considered not efficacious for further clinical trials. Conclusions: The pilot studies provided preliminary data on the efficacy of pine tar bath oil. We do not document a significant efficacy for bathing with tea extracts. Bathing with pine-tar is potentially a complementary topical treatment with good patient acceptance and adherence, but further evidence-based research for its recommendations is needed.
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spelling pubmed-64739072019-04-30 Pilot Studies on Two Complementary Bath Products for Atopic Dermatitis Children: Pine-Tar and Tea Hon, Kam Lun Ng, Wing Gi Gigi Kung, Jeng Sum C. Leung, Ping Chung Leung, Ting Fan Medicines (Basel) Article Background: Few standardized bath product clinical trials were performed for atopic dermatitis patients. Pine-tar and green tea extracts are plant-derived products that have been described as having anti-allergic effects which may reduce AD disease severity. Methods: The efficacy of two complementary bath products was studied and compared. Efficacy and acceptability of the bath products were measured by patient general acceptability of treatment (GAT: very good, good, fair or poor), disease severity (SCORAD: SCoring Atopic Dermatitis), quality of life (CDLQI: Children Dermatology Life Quality Index), and pertinent clinical parameters were measured before and after four weeks of treatment. Sample size calculations for further clinical trials were performed. In one group, nine AD patients were subjected to bathing with a pine-tar bath oil for 10–15 min daily for four weeks. In another group, 20 AD subjects bathed with a teabag containing green tea extracts for four weeks. Results: Significant improvements in clinical- and patient-orientated parameters were found in the pine-tar bathing group, but not the tea-bag bathing group. Both groups reported very good/good GAT on the studied products. Teabag bathing was considered not efficacious for further clinical trials. Conclusions: The pilot studies provided preliminary data on the efficacy of pine tar bath oil. We do not document a significant efficacy for bathing with tea extracts. Bathing with pine-tar is potentially a complementary topical treatment with good patient acceptance and adherence, but further evidence-based research for its recommendations is needed. MDPI 2019-01-08 /pmc/articles/PMC6473907/ /pubmed/30626074 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/medicines6010008 Text en © 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Hon, Kam Lun
Ng, Wing Gi Gigi
Kung, Jeng Sum C.
Leung, Ping Chung
Leung, Ting Fan
Pilot Studies on Two Complementary Bath Products for Atopic Dermatitis Children: Pine-Tar and Tea
title Pilot Studies on Two Complementary Bath Products for Atopic Dermatitis Children: Pine-Tar and Tea
title_full Pilot Studies on Two Complementary Bath Products for Atopic Dermatitis Children: Pine-Tar and Tea
title_fullStr Pilot Studies on Two Complementary Bath Products for Atopic Dermatitis Children: Pine-Tar and Tea
title_full_unstemmed Pilot Studies on Two Complementary Bath Products for Atopic Dermatitis Children: Pine-Tar and Tea
title_short Pilot Studies on Two Complementary Bath Products for Atopic Dermatitis Children: Pine-Tar and Tea
title_sort pilot studies on two complementary bath products for atopic dermatitis children: pine-tar and tea
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6473907/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30626074
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/medicines6010008
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