Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 II, 5. 9. FB| asthma, atopic dermatitis - eczema - and other skin complaints,
2 II, 5. 9. FB| conjunctivitis or atopic eczema/atopic dermatitis.~ ~
3 II, 5. 9. FB| of disease such as atopic eczema or respiratory allergy.
4 II, 5. 9. FB| effective: treat atopic eczema/atopic dermatitis topically,
5 II, 5. 9. 2| rhino-conjunctivitis and atopic eczema in 6-7 and 13-15 years old
6 II, 5. 9. 2| rhino-conjunctivitis and eczema were administered.~ ~The Euro y (
7 II, 5. 9. 3| hay fever (61 and 73%) and eczema (41 and 50%) in the ECRHS
8 II, 5. 9. 4| 74 to 1.02:1 P <0.0001), eczema (1.42:1 to 0.81:1 P <0.0001)
9 II, 5. 9. 4| those with accompanying eczema and/or hay fever RR 1.20 (
10 II, 5. 9. 4| for those with wheeze and eczema and/or hay fever. From 1989
11 II, 5. 9. 4| bronchitis (OR = 31.9) and atopic eczema (OR = 3.8) in the first
12 II, 5. 9. 4| fever, allergic contact eczema) from 2003 to 2006 in a
13 II, 5. 9. 7| of asthma, hay fever, and eczema in 12-14 year olds in the
14 II, 5. 9. 7| rates for childhood asthma, eczema, and hay fever. Pediatr
15 II, 5. 11. 3| Occupational dermatosis (eczema) range among the most frequent
16 II, 5. 11. 3| bites, dandruff (seborrheic eczema of the scalp), dry skin,
17 II, 5. 11. 3| 15%~Mortz C, et al~Hand eczema~Swedish adults (large questionnaire
18 II, 5. 11. 3| Atopic Dermatisis~Atopic eczema (atopic dermatitis) is a
19 II, 5. 11. 3| continuous in some cases. Atopic eczema often has a genetic element
20 II, 5. 11. 3| allergens - which can make the eczema worse. Many cases of atopic
21 II, 5. 11. 3| worse. Many cases of atopic eczema clear or improve during
22 II, 5. 11. 3| children who have atopic eczema will go on to develop asthma
23 II, 5. 11. 3| atopic march’ Although atopic eczema is not always recognised
24 II, 5. 11. 3| diseases such as childhood eczema (atopic dermatitis) suggest
25 II, 5. 11. 3| never having had atopic eczema (Williams et al, 1994b)
26 II, 5. 11. 3| known to have visible atopic eczema, 60% of eczema cases were
27 II, 5. 11. 3| visible atopic eczema, 60% of eczema cases were considered to
28 II, 5. 11. 3| overall frequency of atopic eczema of between 1.2% to 10% (
29 II, 5. 11. 3| epidemiological studies of atopic eczema have only been developed
30 II, 5. 11. 3| the prevalence of atopic eczema has increased two- to three-fold
31 II, 5. 11. 3| considered asimportant.~Atopic eczema in childhood shows a striking
32 II, 5. 11. 3| the expression of atopic eczema. A recent study has found
33 II, 5. 11. 3| the prevalence of atopic eczema (measured in three different
34 II, 5. 11. 3| prevalence studies of atopic eczema in the UK, data for examined
35 II, 5. 11. 3| the UK, data for examined eczema from a national birth cohort
36 II, 5. 11. 3| The terms dermatitis and eczema are synonymous and refer
37 II, 5. 11. 3| exposure, whereas the term eczema refers to an endogenous
38 II, 5. 11. 3| as atopic or seborrhoeic eczema.~Contact dermatitis refers
39 II, 5. 11. 3| nickel-sensitive people develop hand eczema that may be recurrent, chronic
40 II, 5. 11. 3| this section refer to any eczema that is not contact eczema
41 II, 5. 11. 3| eczema that is not contact eczema or atopic eczema. Examples
42 II, 5. 11. 3| contact eczema or atopic eczema. Examples are seborrhoeic
43 II, 5. 11. 3| Examples are seborrhoeic eczema, discoid eczema, asteatotic
44 II, 5. 11. 3| seborrhoeic eczema, discoid eczema, asteatotic eczema, pompholyx
45 II, 5. 11. 3| discoid eczema, asteatotic eczema, pompholyx eczema, varicose
46 II, 5. 11. 3| asteatotic eczema, pompholyx eczema, varicose eczema, photosensitive
47 II, 5. 11. 3| pompholyx eczema, varicose eczema, photosensitive eczema and
48 II, 5. 11. 3| varicose eczema, photosensitive eczema and lichen simplex. Detailed
49 II, 5. 11. 3| had clinically significant eczema that was not atopic eczema
50 II, 5. 11. 3| eczema that was not atopic eczema or contact dermatitis (Johnson,
51 II, 5. 11. 3| mainly adults. Asteatotic eczema may be especially common
52 II, 5. 11. 3| bimodal distribution of eczema prevalence thought to warrant
53 II, 5. 11. 3| between endogenous and contact eczema. Younger ages may also suffer
54 II, 5. 11. 3| 20s and occupational hand eczema in men and women in the
55 II, 5. 11. 3| of adults in Europe.~Hand eczema represents one of the four
56 II, 5. 11. 4| use his/her hands. Atopic eczema and scabies are intensely
57 II, 5. 11. 5| prevented from developing atopic eczema through a range of measures
58 II, 5. 11. 7| economic burden of atopic eczema: a community and hospital-based
59 II, 5. 11. 7| prevalence of childhood atopic eczema in a general population.
60 II, 5. 11. 7| and prevention of aropic eczema. Cambridge: Cambridge University
61 II, 5. 11. 7| clinical guideline 57 – Atopic eczema in children, London: 2007.~ ~
62 II, 5. 11. 7| Epidemiology of atopic eczema. In Handbook of atopic eczema
63 II, 5. 11. 7| eczema. In Handbook of atopic eczema eds T Ruzicka, J Ring, B
64 II, 5. 11. 7| studies of treatments for hand eczema – the EDEN hand-eczema survey.
65 II, 5. 11. 7| Hay RJ (1994a): Childhood eczema: disease of the advantaged?
66 Key, Ap5. 0. 0| ecosystem~ecosystems~ecstasy~eczema~eczemas~edentulous~education~