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Wiley InterScience

Journal of the European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology

Journal of the European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology

Volume 14 Issue 5, Pages 389 - 392

Published Online: 25 Dec 2001

Journal compilation © 2010 European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology



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The natural history of hidradenitis suppurativa
JM von der Werth, * HC Williams
  Department of Dermatology, Queen's Medical Centre, Nottingham NG7 2UH, UK.   *Corresponding author, Lincoln County Hospital, Greetwell Road, Lincoln LN2 5QY, UK, tel. +44 1522 512512; fax +44 1522 573101; E-mail: jan@vonderwerth.freeserve.co.uk
Copyright © 2000 European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology
KEYWORDS
hidradenitis suppurativa • natural history • treatment

ABSTRACT

 

Abstract

Aim To investigate aspects of the natural history of hidradenitis.

Background The natural history of hidradenitis suppurativa (HS) is not well known. There is incomplete published data on the average age of disease onset, progression of the disease, average monthly incidence and duration of boils, and factors that relieve or exacerbate disease symptoms.

Study design Questionnaire-based survey among HS patients identified from hospital records of three hospitals in Nottinghamshire, UK.

Results One hundred and ten of 156 questionnaires (70.5%) were returned, 93 from females and 17 from males. The average patient's age was 40.1 years and the average reported age of disease onset was 21.8 years. At the time of the survey patients had suffered an average disease duration of 18.8 years. Most patients (98 of 110) still had experienced active disease within the past year. There was some evidence that in women the condition has a tendency to ease or subside after the menopause. Forty-four per cent of women felt that their condition was aggravated by menstruation. Thirty-eight per cent of patients gave a positive family history of the disorder. The average duration of painful boils was 6.9 days. In addition, 62% of patients acknowledged the presence of permanently painful boils that failed to subside. Patients developed a median of two boils per month. Factors that could aggravate the condition were primarily sweating or heat, stress or fatigue and tight clothing or friction. Factors that could improve the condition consisted largely of a variety of medical treatments and a number of life-style measures, such as swimming or baths. Twenty-four per cent of patients had failed to find anything at all to help their condition, despite an average disease duration of almost 19 years.

Conclusions The study highlights several of the factors that make HS one of the most distressing dermatological diseases, such as the average monthly incidence of painful lesions, their average duration and the chronicity of the disease. It seems striking that the mean duration of an HS boil (6.9 days) roughly equals the duration of an average course of antibiotics. The postulated response of HS to oral antibiotics may thus simply have its explanation in the natural history of the condition itself.


Received: 19 April 2000, accepted 26 May 2000

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1046/j.1468-3083.2000.00087.x About DOI

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