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Skin Sodium Accumulates in Psoriasis and Reflects Disease Severity

Tijdschriftbijdrage - Tijdschriftartikel

Sodium can accumulate in the skin at concentrations exceeding serum levels. A high sodium environment can lead to pathogenic T helper 17 cell expansion. Psoriasis is a chronic inflammatory skin disease in which IL-17. producing T helper 17 cells play a crucial role. In an observational study, we measured skin sodium content in patients with psoriasis and in age-matched healthy controls by Sodium-23 magnetic resonance imaging. Patients with PASI > 5 showed significantly higher sodium and water content in the skin but not in other tissues than those with lower PASI or healthy controls. Skin sodium concentrations measured by Sodium-23 spectroscopy or by atomic absorption spectrometry in ashed-skin biopsies verified the findings with Sodium-23 magnetic resonance imaging. In vitro T helper 17 cell differentiation of naive CD4(+) cells from patients with psoriasis markedly induced IL-17A expression under increased sodium chloride concentrations. The imiquimod-induced psoriasis mouse model replicated the human findings. Extracellular tracer Chromium-51-EDTA measurements in imiquimod- and sham-treated skin showed similar extracellular volumes, rendering excessive water of intracellular origin. Chronic genetic IL-17A-driven psoriasis mouse models underlined the role of IL-17A in dermal sodium accumulation and inflammation. Our data describe skin sodium as a pathophysiological feature of psoriasis, which could open new avenues for its treatment.
Tijdschrift: JOURNAL OF INVESTIGATIVE DERMATOLOGY
ISSN: 0022-202X
Issue: 1
Volume: 142
Pagina's: 166 - +
Jaar van publicatie:2022
Toegankelijkheid:Closed