Criteria
Hanifin and Rajka criteria[68][69]
The diagnosis of atopic dermatitis using the Hanifin and Rajka criteria requires that patients have at least 3 of the 4 major criteria and 3 of the 23 minor criteria.
Major criteria:
Pruritus
Dermatitis affecting flexural surfaces in adults and the face and extensors in infants
Chronic or relapsing dermatitis
Personal or family history of cutaneous or respiratory atopy.
Minor criteria can be divided into 4 categories.
Facial features: facial pallor, facial erythema, hypopigmented patches, infraorbital darkening, infraorbital folds (Dennie-Morgan folds), cheilitis, recurrent conjunctivitis, anterior neck folds.
Triggers: foods, emotional factors, environmental factors, skin irritants.
Complications: susceptibility to cutaneous infections, impaired cell-mediated immunity, immediate skin-test reactivity, elevated IgE, keratoconus, anterior subcapsular cataracts.
Other: early age of onset, dry skin, ichthyosis, hyperlinear palms, keratosis pilaris, hand and foot dermatitis, nipple eczema, white dermatographism, perifollicular accentuation.
The Hanifin and Rajka criteria are the most commonly used atopic dermatitis diagnostic criteria in randomized controlled trials internationally.[70]
Danish Allergy Research Center criteria[71]
Diagnosis of atopic dermatitis based on the Danish Allergy Research Center criteria requires the presence of the following.
1. Personal history of itching within the last 3 months, or visible evidence of itching or scratching at the time of exam.
2. Atopic dermatitis in at least 2 of the following 4 regions:
Face or neck
Trunk
Flexor or extensor aspects of arms or legs.
OR a history of atopic dermatitis in at least 2 of the following 5 regions in the last 3 months:
Antecubital or popliteal fossae
Wrists or ankles
Face or neck
Hands, arms, or legs
Body.
3. Continuing itchy atopic dermatitis during the past 6 weeks.
United Kingdom Working Party diagnostic criteria[72][73][74]
Patients must have a history of itchy skin plus at least 3 of the following:
History of a flexural involvement (antecubital or popliteal fossae, front of ankles, wrists or neck)
Visible flexural dermatitis
Personal history of asthma or hay fever (or history of atopic disease in parents or siblings if the patient is younger than 4 years of age)
History of a generally dry skin in the last year
Onset under the age of 2.
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