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Dialysis Therapy for Psoriasis:  Report of Three Cases and Review of the Literature

Sima Halevy, MD; Jonathan Halevy, MD; Geoffrey Boner, MBBCh; Joseph B. Rosenfeld, MD; Eleasar J. Feuerman, MD
Arch Dermatol. 1981;117(2):69-72. doi:10.1001/archderm.1981.01650020011014.
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• Three patients with psoriasis, who were resistant to all modes of accepted therapy, underwent 32 hours of peritoneal dialysis weekly for ten weeks. In two patients, there was a clearing of 80% of the psoriatic lesions after completion of therapy. In one of these patients, there was a recurrence of the lesions two months later, but the other patient is still in relative remission after 12 months. The third patient had clearing of 50% of the lesions, but there was recurrence two months after cessation of treatment. This experience as well as a review of the literature indicates that dialysis may have a positive effect on psoriasis and that the effect obtained is more prominent with peritoneal dialysis than with hemodialysis.

(Arch Dermatol 117:69-72. 1981)

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