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Contact dermatitis and sensitization in professional musicians

Authors :
Kraft, Magdalena
Schubert, Steffen
Geier, Johannes
Worm, Margitta
Beiteke, Ulrike
Dissemond, Joachim
Buhl, Timo
Schäkel, Knut
Pföhler, Claudia
Brasch, Jochen
Bauer, Andrea
Kreft, Burkhard
Schliemann, Sibylle
Darsow, Ulf
Becker, Detlef
Forchhammer, Stephan
Hartmann, Karin
Witte, Jana
Pfützner, Wolfgang
Coras-Stepanek, Brigitte
Skudlik, Christoph
Wagner, Nicola
Aberer, Werner
Emmert, Steffen
Baron, Jens Malte
Siedlecki, Katharina
Baur, Vera
Schmieder, Astrid
Weisshaar, Elke
Grunwald-Delitz, Heidrun
Trautmann, Axel
Bircher, Andreas
Szliska, Christiane
Weiß, Johannes
Effendy, Isaak
Jünger, Michael
Brehler, Randolf
Molin, Sonja
Werfel, Thomas
Dickel, Heinrich
Rieker-Schwienbacher, Juliane
Vieluf, Dieter
Stadler, Rudolf
Simon, Dagmar
Fartasch, Manigé
Navarini, Alexander
Treudler, Regina
Nestoris, Stefan
Mechtel, Dirk
Schröder-Kraft, Claudia
Löffler, Harald
Fischer, Matthias
Koch, André
Raap, Ulrike
Grabbe, Jürgen
di Lucca, Julie
Zutt, Markus
Spring, Philipp
Prager, Welf
Source :
Contact Dermatitis. 80:273-278
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Wiley, 2019.

Abstract

BACKGROUND Professional musicians have prolonged and intense physical contact with their instruments. This can lead to occupational skin diseases, particularly irritant and allergic contact dermatitis. OBJECTIVES To assess the skin diseases and sensitization patterns common among professional musicians. METHODS A retrospective analysis of the data of the Information Network of Departments of Dermatology (IVDK) was performed, including data from 1997 to 2017. RESULTS We identified 236 professional musicians. In this group, male sex (58.6%) and younger age (60.6% aged < 40 years) were common. The musicians suffered more frequently from facial dermatitis (23.7% vs 15.7%) and less often from leg dermatitis (5.1% vs 10.7%) than the control group (the non-musicians in the IVDK database). The most frequent diagnoses were allergic contact dermatitis, atopic dermatitis, and irritant contact dermatitis. The sensitization profile of the professional musicians was similar to that of the control group. In 8.9% of cases, an occupational background of skin disease was confirmed. CONCLUSIONS Severe occupational skin diseases among professional musicians are not as common as in classic "skin-damaging" professions. However, as these skin conditions can mostly be controlled with simple preventive measures, we recommend that this group should be patch tested and treated by a specialist.

Details

ISSN :
01051873
Volume :
80
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Contact Dermatitis
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e29021375391a08419b7626c4a9f85ca