A double-blind study of superficial radiotherapy in psoriatic nail dystrophy

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Abstract

In a double-blind controlled study, superficial radiotherapy (SRT) was given to psoriatic fingernails as three fractionated doses of 150 cGy (90 kV, 5 mA, 1.00 mm aluminium filter). The treated nails demonstrated a significant fall in scoring on a clinical rating scale 10 and 15 weeks after therapy (mean scores = 4.4 and 4.6 respectively) when compared with a mean pretreatment score of 5.5 at week 0 (p < 0.0001 and p < 0.05 respectively); the treated nails also showed significant clinical improvement when compared with the sham-treated nails at weeks 10 and 15 (p < 0.05). Mean nail thickness in treated nails 15 weeks after therapy was significantly thinner (mean thickness = 0 .75 mm) than that of sham-treated nails (0.88 mm, p=0.005), but the difference was not significant at week 20. The rate of linear nail growth was unaffected. SRT appears to confer a definite albeit temporary benefit on psoriasis of the nails at this dosage.

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APA

Yu, R. C. H., & King, C. M. (1992). A double-blind study of superficial radiotherapy in psoriatic nail dystrophy. Acta Dermato-Venereologica, 72(2), 134–136. https://doi.org/10.2340/0001555572134136

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