Guest guest Posted December 28, 2001 Report Share Posted December 28, 2001 Thanks for your input. I will keep your responses in mind. I have tried several ointments and antibiotics the dermatologist recommended and nothing worked. The psoriasis is currently limited to my extremities, so I don't have the scalp to contend with yet. The places on my arms are what he froze. They looked so bad that I was wearing long sleeves even in warm weather. When the ointments failed, I was ready to try anything. Now I am wondering if these areas were really psoriasis. My rheumy told me that trauma only makes psoriasis worse and that to freeze the area is to traumatize the area. So, I probably should have gotten another opinion. Fortunately, I am on a PPO, so I can select my own specialist without a referral. (Will never be on an HMO again!) The bad news is that I did not exercise this option before agreeing to the freeze. I must say the areas look worse than before. (sigh) Thanks to everyone for their responses. This is a great group! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 28, 2001 Report Share Posted December 28, 2001 Hi , The freezing treatment does sound a bit aggressive and my own dermatologist seems to be against anything that " overdoes " the job, explaining that it only sets you up for more and more untreatable symptoms. I guess the real questions here are, how out of control is your psoriasis?, and what has already been tried? My own is moderate and the treatments I'm getting are new for me. They seem to be quite effective. They are: Derma-Smoothe/FS (Fluocinolone Acetonide) in 0.01% topical oil for the scalp. It is made by Hill Dermaceuticals, Inc. in Sanford, Florida (that is the right spelling). The oil is peanut and mineral so you need to know that if you have allergies. I rub it into my scalp three times a week and cover it with a shower cap. It has to stay on for at least six hours so I do it at bedtime. You wash it out in the morning with ordinary shampoo (I use Neutrogena anti-residue shampoo so it gets all the oil out of the hair without irritating the scalp). I also have to alternate shampoos with Polytar AF. It is surprising less odorous that the ordinary tar shampoos. I used Denorex for awhile and it's good, but this is better. On my back, arms and legs, I have to use Dovonex (calcipotriol cream 50 ug/g) ointment at night and cream in the morning. The brand name might be a Canadian one because it comes out of Leo Pharma Inc. in Ontario. I do know, though, that there is a US product exactly the same. You will need to ask about that if you are interested. It works great, but you have to stick to the regimen religiously (something I'm not great at). My nails were getting bad and I was given 2.5% Hydrocortisone, 10% Urea in Dovonex. It's fantastic! Just two weeks and my nails are looking healthy again. My face turns out to have seborrhea and not psoriasis as my GP thought. For that I was given Nizoral/Hydrocortisone 1% AA. The jury's still out on that one, but I'm hoping. Having given you all that information, I think it's important for us all to realize that what works for one doesn't mean it will work for everyone. This is mine and it seems good. I wouldn't necessarily throw out your dermatologist's advice, but I would get a second opinion if I were you (easy for me to say, I know, because here in Canada we don't have the HMO's and their insurance companies dictating what they will or won't do). Good luck. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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