Relationship between Immune Cells, Depression, Stress, and Psoriasis: Could the Use of Natural Products Be Helpful?
Alessio AlesciEugenia Rita LaurianoAngelo FumiaNatasha IrreraEnza MastrantonioMario VaccaroSebastiano GangemiAmirhossein NazhandNicola CiceroSimona PergolizziPublished in: Molecules (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
Psoriasis is one of the most widespread chronic inflammatory skin diseases, affecting about 2%-3% of the worldwide adult population. The pathogenesis of this disease is quite complex, but an interaction between genetic and environmental factors has been recognized with an essential modulation of inflammatory and immune responses in affected patients. Psoriatic plaques generally represent the clinical psoriatic feature resulting from an abnormal proliferation and differentiation of keratinocytes, which cause dermal hyperplasia, skin infiltration of immune cells, and increased capillarity. Some scientific pieces of evidence have reported that psychological stress may play a key role in psoriasis, and the disease itself may cause stress conditions in patients, thus reproducing a vicious cycle. The present review aims at examining immune cell involvement in psoriasis and the relationship of depression and stress in its pathogenesis and development. In addition, this review contains a focus on the possible use of natural products, thus pointing out their mechanism of action in order to counteract clinical and psychological symptoms.
Keyphrases
- end stage renal disease
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- immune response
- chronic kidney disease
- rheumatoid arthritis
- prognostic factors
- depressive symptoms
- machine learning
- disease activity
- wound healing
- signaling pathway
- gene expression
- soft tissue
- ankylosing spondylitis
- genome wide
- systemic lupus erythematosus
- patient reported outcomes
- atopic dermatitis
- inflammatory response