Atopic Dermatitis Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Atopic Dermatitis stocks.

Atopic Dermatitis Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Jun 16 ABBV 2 Dividend Stocks That Could Pay You for Life
Jun 16 REGN Updated Linvoseltamab Data Showcase Continued Deepening of Responses in Patients with Heavily Pre-Treated Multiple Myeloma
Jun 15 ABBV ALS therapy market seen increasing to nearly $1.3B by 2029
Jun 14 ABBV AbbVie urges shareholders to reject mini-tender offer
Jun 14 ABBV AbbVie Recommends Shareholders Reject Tutanota's "Mini-Tender" Offer
Jun 14 REGN Regeneron Pharmaceuticals Wins Injunctions Against Biosimilars to Eye Disease Drug Eylea
Jun 14 REGN Regeneron wins injunction blocking Samsung Bioepis from launching generic Eylea
Jun 14 ARQT Wall Street Analysts Think Arcutis Biotherapeutics (ARQT) Could Surge 99.89%: Read This Before Placing a Bet
Jun 14 ABBV Pharma Stock Roundup: FDA Panel Endorses LLY's Donanemab, PFE's DMD Therapy Study Fails
Jun 14 ABBV AbbVie (ABBV) Buys Global Rights to Novel IBD Candidate
Jun 14 ABBV AbbVie joins in latest gastrointestinal drug chase
Jun 14 REGN Investors in Regeneron Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ:REGN) have seen stellar returns of 220% over the past five years
Jun 14 KYMR Kymera Therapeutics Presents New Clinical Data from the Ongoing Phase 1 Trial of STAT3 Degrader KT-333 at EHA Annual Meeting
Jun 14 ABBV AbbVie and FutureGen link on inflammatory bowel disease
Jun 13 ABBV Here's How Many Shares Of AbbVie You Would Need To Earn $500 Per Month In Dividends
Jun 13 ARQT Avidity (RNA) Up 33% on Rare Muscle Disease Study Results
Jun 13 ARQT FDA Expands AstraZeneca's (AZN) Farxiga Label in Pediatric T2D
Jun 13 VYNE VYNE Therapeutics Announces Dosing of First Participants in Phase 1a Trial of Novel BD2-Selective BET Inhibitor VYN202
Jun 13 ABBV AbbVie inks licensing pact for bowel disorder therapy
Jun 13 REGN Why It's A New Day For COPD Patients — And Regeneron, Sanofi, Verona Stocks
Atopic Dermatitis

Atopic dermatitis (AD), also known as atopic eczema, is a type of inflammation of the skin (dermatitis). It results in itchy, red, swollen, and cracked skin. Clear fluid may come from the affected areas, which often thicken over time. While the condition may occur at any age, it typically starts in childhood with changing severity over the years. In children under one year of age much of the body may be affected. As children get older, the back of the knees and front of the elbows are the most common areas affected. In adults the hands and feet are the most commonly affected areas. Scratching worsens symptoms and affected people have an increased risk of skin infections. Many people with atopic dermatitis develop hay fever or asthma.The cause is unknown but believed to involve genetics, immune system dysfunction, environmental exposures, and difficulties with the permeability of the skin. If one identical twin is affected, there is an 85% chance the other also has the condition. Those who live in cities and dry climates are more commonly affected. Exposure to certain chemicals or frequent hand washing makes symptoms worse. While emotional stress may make the symptoms worse it is not a cause. The disorder is not contagious. The diagnosis is typically based on the signs and symptoms. Other diseases that must be excluded before making a diagnosis include contact dermatitis, psoriasis, and seborrheic dermatitis.Treatment involves avoiding things that make the condition worse, daily bathing with application of a moisturising cream afterwards, applying steroid creams when flares occur, and medications to help with itchiness. Things that commonly make it worse include wool clothing, soaps, perfumes, chlorine, dust, and cigarette smoke. Phototherapy may be useful in some people. Steroid pills or creams based on calcineurin inhibitors may occasionally be used if other measures are not effective. Antibiotics (either by mouth or topically) may be needed if a bacterial infection develops. Dietary changes are only needed if food allergies are suspected.Atopic dermatitis affects about 20% of people at some point in their lives. It is more common in younger children. Males and females are equally affected. Many people outgrow the condition. Atopic dermatitis is sometimes called eczema, a term that also refers to a larger group of skin conditions. Other names include "infantile eczema", "flexural eczema", "prurigo Besnier", "allergic eczema", and "neurodermatitis".

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