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Mycosis Fungoides Cure - Mycosis Fungoides Medicine Drug
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Mycosis Fungoides (also known as Alibert-Bazin syndrome[1] or
granuloma fungoides), is the most common form of cutaneous T-cell
lymphoma. It generally affects the skin, but may progress internally
over time.
Mycosis Fungoides was first described in 1806 by French dermatologist
Jean-Louis-Marc Alibert. The name mycosis fungoides is somewhat
misleading--it loosely means "mushroom-like fungal disease".
The disease, however, is not a fungal infection but rather a type of
non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. It was so named because Alibert described the
skin tumors of a severe case as having a mushroom-like appearance.
Contents [hide]
1 Origins and causes
2 Symptoms, diagnosis, and stages
3 Treatments and cures
4 See also
5 References
6 External links
[edit] Origins and causes
The cause of mycosis fungoides is unknown, but it is not believed to
be hereditary or genetic. It is not contagious.
It is rare for the disease to appear before age 20, and it appears to
be noticeably more common in males than females, especially over the
age of 50, where the incidence of the disease (the risk per person in
the population) does increase. The average age of onset is between 45
and 55 years of age for patients with patch and plaque disease only,
but is over 60 for patients who present with tumours, erythroderma
(red skin) or a leukemic form (the Sézary syndrome).
The disease is an unusual expression of T-cells, a part of the immune
system. These T-cells are skin-associated, meaning that they
biochemically and biologically are most related to the skin, in a
dynamic manner. Mycosis Fungoides is the most common type of
'Cutaneous T-cell Lymphoma' (CTCL), but there are many other types of
CTCL that have nothing to do with Mycosis Fungoides and these
disorders are treated differently.
[edit] Symptoms, diagnosis, and stages
Typical visible symptoms include rashlike patches, tumors, or
lesions. Itching (pruritus) is common, perhaps in 20% of patients,
and is not universal.
Diagnosis is sometimes difficult because the early phases of the
disease often resemble eczema or even psoriasis. As with any serious
disease, it is advisable to pursue the opinion of a medical
professional if a case is suspected. Diagnosis is generally
accomplished through a skin biopsy. Several biopsies are recommended,
to be more certain of the diagnosis. The diagnosis is made through a
combination of the clinical picture and examination, and is confirmed
by biopsy.
To stage the disease, various tests may be ordered, to assess nodes,
blood and internal organs, but most patients present with disease
apparently confined to the skin, as patches (flat spots) and plaques
(slightly raised or 'wrinkled' spots).
[edit] Treatments and cures
Mycosis fungoides can be treated in a variety of ways.
If treatment is successful the disease can go into a non-progressing
state with clinically clear examination and various tests. This is
called remission; it can last indefinitely. Treatments may also cause
disease not to progress, while still present, and this is called
stable disease; it may last indefinitely but is a more serious
situation. Disease may also progress, to involve nodes, blood and
internal organs, or transform into a higher-grade lymphoma.
Common treatments include simple sunlight, ultraviolet light, topical
steroids, topical and systemic chemotherapies, local superficial
radiotherapy, total skin electron beam radiation, and biological
therapies (e.g. interferons, retinoids, rexinoids).Vorinostat
(Zolinza®) is a second-line drug for CTCL. Application of organic
(Manuka) honey to skin affected by erythorderma (red skin) has also
proved to be effective in reducing inflammation. Treatments are often
used in combination.
Selection of treatments typically depends on patient preference and
access to therapies, as well as recommendations by physicians, the
stage of the disease, established resistance to prior therapies,
allergies of the patient, clinical evidence of a positive
benefit:risk ratio, and so on.
It is debatable whether cures are reliably obtained through different
types of treatments, but many patients experience prolonged periods
of disease-control and at least half of all patients do not die from
this disease, even if not truly cured. Quality of life is a major
objective, in addition to cure, and maximizing periods of remission
or stable disease, while minimizing treatments and toxicities, are
two central concerns in clinical care.
[edit] See also
Sézary's disease
[edit] References
^ synd/98 at Who Named It
[edit] External links
DermAtlas 197
The Lymphoma Information Network - Cutaneous T-Cell Lymphomas
The Doctor's Doctor (detailed information)
Cutaneous Lymphoma Foundation (formerly MFF)
Clinical trial NCT00106431 - "A Single Agent Phase II Study of
Romidepsin (Depsipeptide, FK228) in the Treatment of Cutaneous T-Cell Lymphoma"
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