Welcome
Welcome to the Egyptian Psoriasis Network website. The network is open to all doctors interested in psoriasis . The main goal of the network is to promote and coordinate research in the field of psoriasis in Egypt. The Egyptian Psoriasis Network is a member of International Psoriasis Network, this link will definitely have positive implications. Your contributions and remarks via email are highly appreciated.
Sincerely
Emad Elgamal
Coordinator, Egyptian Psoriasis Network
Examples of Psoriasis

Allergies
Are psoriasis and allergies linked? The immune system appears to play a key role in both. Researchers have found that people with psoriasis are more likely to have a greater number of inflammatory mast cells (see left) the kind that trigger allergic reactions, such as swelling and itching -- than people without it. Although psoriasis may be a reaction of the immune system, it is not proven to be an allergic reaction. Studies have found no link between allergens and psoriasis.

Smoking
Research shows smoking is directly linked to the severity of your psoriasis. The more you smoke, the worse your flare-ups, with outbreaks most often appearing on the hands and feet. Kicking the habit may reduce the number of psoriasis flares and, for some, end them. You don't have to take on the challenge alone. Ask your doctor about ways to smooth the transition to becoming smoke-free.

Tattoos
Tattoos can look cool, but to psoriatic skin the tattooing process can be a nightmare. Repeatedly piercing the skin and injecting it with dyes is a major trauma. Trauma to the skin can cause new lesions to appear, often 10 to 14 days later. Tattoos can also lead to infection -- another psoriasis trigger. Treat your skin with care. Avoid tattoos and acupuncture, and talk with your doctor about shots.

Infections
Common infections are doubly difficult for people with psoriasis. Yeast infections, thrush, strep throat, respiratory infections, and staph infections are all known psoriasis triggers. The good news? Once you treat the infection, your psoriasis flare may also calm down.

Medications
Some drugs used to treat high blood pressure, heart disease, arthritis, and psychiatric disorders can trigger psoriasis. ACE inhibitors, beta-blockers, and lithium are common offenders that can cause psoriasis flare-ups as well as malaria drugs, such as Plaquenil and hydroxychloroquine, and NSAIDs. Oral steroids such as prednisone work to control flares but may cause a worsening of the condition after coming off long-term use. Talk to your doctor if your medication is worsening your psoriasis.

Cuts and Bruises
Slice your hand in the kitchen or scrape a knee and pow! new lesions may appear where you were injured. This is called Koebner's phenomenon. Avoid skin injury and trauma when you can. Wear gloves while working in the garden. Prevent bug bites and sunburn. And use care when trimming nails and shaving.

Hormones
Psoriasis can start at any age in both men and women. But it seems to peak in people between the ages of 20 and 30 as well as those between the ages of 50 and 60. Both puberty and menopause also seem to trigger psoriasis patches. Hormones are often thought to be the link.Interestingly, one study found that high levels of estrogen during pregnancy seemed to improve psoriasis in some women.

Stress
Objectives
- Collaborating in identifying the prognosis and epidemiology of this disease through Registries.
- Sharing same resources and activities, enabling wide screening on a national scale.
- Create a platform for clinical and therapeutic research on psoriasis in Egypt.
- Creating a platform for collaboration on international and global scale with the international psoriasis network and other international affiliations, through sharing the data and findings, guidelines, updates, know how, collaborating in methodologies and participating in their conferences and meetings.
- Improve the Quality of Science and knowledge for the Psoriasis physicians, through:
- Educational Courses.
- New Updates in Psoriasis.
- Clinical Guidelines.
- Case Presentations.
- Conferences and Teleconferences.
- Patient Education and awareness Campaigns.
- Patient oriented newsletters, journals, fliers, leaflets.
- Applying the updated Guidelines for treatment.