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Health

Itchy skin (pruritus)

, medical expert
Last reviewed: 06.07.2025
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Itchy skin can be a symptom of a skin or systemic disease. Well-known diseases that cause intense itching include scabies, pediculosis, insect bites, urticaria, allergic or contact dermatitis, lichen planus, miliaria, and dermatitis herpetiformis.

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Causes of itchy skin

When itching of the skin is persistent and does not involve any rash, the causes may be dry skin (especially in the elderly), systemic disease, and drug reactions. Systemic diseases that cause generalized itching include cholestatic diseases, uremia, polycythemia, and hematologic malignancies. Itching of the skin may also occur in the last months of pregnancy. Barbiturates, salicylates, morphine, and cocaine may also cause itching of the skin. Less severe causes of itching include thyroid dysfunction, diabetes, anemia, and internal cancer. Very rarely, itching is caused by psychological trauma.

Itching of the skin is possible with dry skin, so this cause of itching should be excluded first. Usually, along with itching, a number of changes are found during examination of the skin, primarily traces of scratching. Itching of the skin can also be a manifestation of various diseases of internal organs, such as liver and bile duct diseases, lymphogranulomatosis. The appearance of itching can be the first sign of intolerance to drugs, food products, other allergic conditions (urticaria).

Itchy skin most often occurs with the following somatic diseases.

  • Obstruction (blockage) of the bile ducts, when itching is a consequence of jaundice with hyperbilirubinemia, which is very typical for cholestasis syndrome of various origins (especially with liver cirrhosis, namely primary biliary cirrhosis of the liver, drug-induced liver damage). Itching is also possible in pregnant women with the development of so-called cholestasis of pregnancy (pruritus of pregnancy).
  • In chronic renal failure, itching is one of the symptoms of its terminal stage (uremic intoxication).
  • Diabetes mellitus.
  • Tumor diseases (lymphomas, including lymphogranulomatosis; tumors of the abdominal organs, etc.).
  • Blood diseases (erythremia).

It should not be forgotten that itching can be a consequence of helminthiasis, scabies, pediculosis, and also have a psychogenic nature - the so-called psychogenic itching during stress.

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What to do if you have itchy skin?

Anamnesis

Key elements are the influence of drugs and professional activities/hobbies. Skin itching can be so unbearable that sleep-deprived patients resort to the most extreme measures, even suicide attempts are possible. With prolonged severe itching, scratch marks are usually found on the skin.

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Inspection

The focus should be on identifying the underlying skin disease. Identification may be complicated by redness, papules, scratching of the rash, cracks, lichenification, and hyperpigmentation, which may result from constant scratching.

Study

Some rashes that are itchy require a biopsy. If a systemic disease is suspected, the tests include clinical blood tests, liver function tests, kidney and thyroid function assessment, and diagnosis of malignant neoplasms.

Treatment of itchy skin

Any disease identified is treated. Supportive care includes appropriate skin care and the use of local, systemic and physiotherapeutic methods.

Skin care consists of using cool or warm (not hot) water when bathing, using soap sparingly, regulating the duration and frequency of bathing, using liberally emollients such as petroleum jelly and other oil-based products, humidifying dry air, and wearing loose clothing.

External agents help localize skin itching. Optimal solutions include camphor/menthol lotion or cream, 0.125 to 0.25% menthol, doxepin, 0.5 to 2% phenol, pramoxine, local anesthetic and glucocorticoid solutions. Topical diphenhydramine and doxepin should be avoided because they may increase skin sensitivity.

Systemic agents are indicated for generalized or localized pruritus resistant to topical agents. Antihistamines, principally hydroxyzine, 10 to 50 mg orally every 4 hours, depending on the patient's condition, are very effective and are most commonly used. First-generation antihistamines are used with caution in the elderly because they are addictive and have been associated with syncope; newer-generation, nonaddictive antihistamines such as loratadine, fexofenadine, and cetirizine are thought to be preferable for cutaneous pruritus, although this has not been proven. Other agents include doxepin (for atopy), cholestyramine (for renal failure, cholestasis, polycythemia), opioid antagonists such as naltrexone and nalmefene (for biliary pruritus), cromolyn (for mastocytosis), and possibly gabapentin (for hepatic pruritus).

Physical therapy techniques that may be effective for itching include ultraviolet (UV) light therapy, transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation, and acupuncture.

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