Sign/Symptoms |
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Commonality is rare Gender = F |
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Pruritic urticarial papules and plaques of pregnancy (PUPPP), known in United Kingdom as polymorphic eruption of pregnancy (PEP'''), is a chronic hives-like rash that strikes some women during pregnancy. Although extremely annoying for its sufferers (because of the itch), it presents no long-term risk for either the mother or unborn child. PUPPP frequently begins on the stomach and spreads to the legs, feet, arms, chest, and neck. Although affecting about one in two hundred pregnancies, the condition was only formally identified and described in 1979. PUPPP is also known as Toxemic rash of pregnancy (not to be confused with "Toxemia of pregnancy" which is an alternative term for Pre-eclampsia), and Toxic erythema of pregnancy.
The cause of the condition is unknown, but the distension of the skin is thought to play a role as this condition occurs mostly in first pregnancies (primagravida), in the third trimester and is more likely with multiple pregnancies (more so with triplets than twins or than singletons).Pruritic Urticarial Papules and Plaques of Pregnancy Other than additional associations with hypertension and induction of labour, there are no observed difference in the outcome of the pregnancy for mothers or babies.
Treatment of mild cases during pregnancy consists mainly of the application of topical moisturising creams or aqueous/emmolient ointments. Class I or II corticosteroid creams and ointments are used in more aggressive cases, and oral (systemic) corticosteroids can be used to treat very severe cases--although the benefits of a pregnant woman's ingesting high-potency corticosteroids must be weighed carefully against possible (and mostly unknown) risks to the developing fetus or fetuses. Rarely, in unusually persistent and distressing cases, some women have had their labor induced as soon as they are considered to be at term (37 weeks)http://www.jaoa.org/cgi/reprint/102/1/44.pdf. Antihistamine tablets may be prescribed to provide relief from the itch, although they are generally considered much less effective than corticosteroid treatments[http://www.emedicine.com/derm/topic351.htm#section~medication eMedicine - Pruritic Urticarial Papules and Plaques of Pregnancy : Article by Joseph C Pierson] and may act as little more than a sleep aid. In the majority of cases, PUPPP resolves spontaneously within a week of delivery. However, a few women continue to experience symptoms long into the postpartum period.
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