Overview

Pilot Study of Traditional Chinese Medicine (Qing-Re-Liang-Xue Decoction) as Complementary Medicine for Psoriasis Vulgaris of Blood-heat Syndrome.

Status:
Recruiting
Trial end date:
2024-07-01
Target enrollment:
Participant gender:
Summary
Psoriasis is a non-contagious erythematous scaly skin disease characterized by epidermal proliferation and inflammation. The etiology is related to heredity, infection, allergies, metabolic disorders and autoimmunity. The incidence of psoriasis in the survey was about 1.2‰ in 1984 in China, and 2.6% in the United States. In recent years, the incidence of psoriasis has been on the increase trend, mostly in the young to middle age adults, and it can last a lifetime. The characteristic of the disease is that it usually spreads all over the body, or gradually aggravates, or is fixed and difficult to subside,or the disease course is long, lingering and difficult to heal, and it brings great harm to the patient's body and mind. At present, there is no effective treatment for psoriasis. Although western medicine has good short-term curative effects, prolonged use is not advocated because of adverse side effects and poor long-term effects. Besides, it is easy to relapse and aggravate after stopping the medicine. Psoriasis belongs to the category of "baibi" in Chinese medicine. Doctors of the past dynasties mostly treated it from blood heat, blood stasis, and blood deficiency syndrome. Researcher Zhu Renkang believes that "blood with heat" is the main cause of psoriasis and famous TCM dermatologists such as Zhang Zhili, Gu Bohua, Xu Yihou and others all regard "blood-heat syndrome" as the basic pathogenesis of psoriasis. We used Qingre Liangxue Recipe Granules to observe the treatment of 31 patients with blood-heat type psoriasis vulgaris, and found that the PASI index of the patients after treatment was significantly lower than before treatment (P <0.01), and the serum VEGF level was significantly decreased (P < 0.01), the correlation analysis between the two showed a significant correlation. This study aims to further evaluate the efficacy and safety of Qing-Re-Liang-Xue Decoction in comparison with commonly used glucocorticoids and calcipotriol ointment in patients with blood-heat type psoriasis vulgaris.
Phase:
Phase 2
Details
Lead Sponsor:
The First Affiliated Hospital of Zhejiang Chinese Medical University
Collaborators:
Ningbo Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine
Pujiang Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine
Wenzhou Hospital of Integrated Traditional Chinese and Western Medicine
Yongkang Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine
Treatments:
Triamcinolone
Triamcinolone Acetonide
Triamcinolone diacetate
Triamcinolone hexacetonide