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How do you approach patients who continue to experience pruritus and ongoing concern for persistent scabies despite having completed appropriate treatment?

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Dermatology · Duke Health

Pruritus can not uncommonly continue in patients for 6 weeks or more after infestation is managed. High-dose antihistamines may be of some benefit. Consider if there is an ongoing untreated exposure that the patient has not thought of or cannot/will not share with you. Not all people infested with s...

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Dermatology · Johns Hopkins Timeshare Practice

Although pruritus may continue for 4-6 weeks after effective treatment of scabies, I would recommend doing a full skin exam to rule out any evidence of persistent infestation and certainly ask about exposure to close contacts who might still be infested.

If no evidence of infestation, I agree that a...

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Dermatology · Forefront Dermatology

@Dr. First Last had an awesome case like this treated with nemolizumab after failing many things.

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Dermatology · Case Western Reserve University

Agree, scabies is contact dermatitis to mites. Expect only gradual improvement in the first month, with complete resolution of symptoms in 2-3 months. Anti-histamines don’t benefit contact dermatitis, but topical steroids will help after infestation is fully eradicated. I don’t see a role for emolli...

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Dermatology · Geisinger Commonwealth Medical College

Given that scabies infestation/re-infestation is ruled out, I routinely treat teenagers and above complaining of persistent itch with IM Kenalog. Works wonders.

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Dermatology · Harvard Medical School/Brigham and Women’s Hospital

The combination of dilute bleach baths, mid-potency steroid ointment, and hydroxyzine works great. I counsel patients to use topical steroid Monday through Friday and take weekends off. Use dilute bleach solution in a spray bottle and/or pramoxine lotion stored in the refrigerator for breakthrough i...

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Dermatology · Montefiore Medical Center

I tell patients they should experience an 80% improvement in pruritus immediately. If they experienced that, the residual 20% is nothing to worry about, and will improve with time as the skin recovers (and can use topical steroids and antihistamines to help).

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