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CLINICAL BENEFIT OF DENIPLANT NUTRITIONAL INTERVENTIONS FOR THE MANAGEMENT OF PSORIASIS

CLINICAL BENEFITS OF DENIPLANT NUTRITIONAL INTERVENTIONS FOR THE MANAGEMENT OF PSORIASIS OF DENIPLANT NUTRITIONAL INTERVENTIONS FOR THE MANAGEMENT OF PSORIASIS

Major Gheorghe Giurgiu Deniplant-Aide Sante Medical Center, Biomedicine, Bucharest, Romania deniplant@gmail.com;  Telephone: +40744827881
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5449-2712

Prof Dr Med Manole Cojocaru2, ARS, SciRes I, EuSpLM The Romanian Academy of Scientists , Titu Maiorescu University, Faculty of Medicine, Bucharest, Romania
cojocaru.manole@gmail.com
Telephone: +40723326663
 https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7192-7490

Psoriasis is a common skin inflammatory condition, affecting approximately 3% of the worldwide population.

Evidence for dysbiosis as a source of disease pathology is well-documented in inflammatory skin conditions, such as psoriasis.

An increasing body of literature suggests a crucial role for the gut microbiome in modulating systemic inflammatory disease.

 Psoriasis is a chronic systemic inflammatory disease and its pathogenesis is related to the interaction between genetic susceptibility, immune response and environmental triggers, such as diet, stress-level, skin-care routine, etc.

Notably, the pathogenesis of psoriasis, similar to other immune-associated skin diseases, is based on close interactions between components of the adaptive and the innate immune systems.

Furthermore, diet appears to play an important role in modulating disease activity, perhaps by influencing gut microbes.

The gut-skin axis is the novel concept of the interaction between skin diseases and microbiome through inflammatory mediators, metabolites and the intestinal barrier. 

The dysregulated skin microbiota may become a novel therapeutic target in psoriatic patients. 

It is known that also calorie restriction and low calorie diet can improve the symptomatology and the development of psoriasis.

Correct food choices may have a crucial role in the pathogenesis of psoriasis.

 The concept of the gut-brain-skin axis emphasized in mental health disorders may also regulate the health of skin.

Like the skin microbiota, the composition of the gut microbiota and its association with psoriasis are unclear.

The skingut axis concept provides a new insight to investigate the association between the intestinal microbiota and the skin.

This offers a feasible approach for improving skin conditions, by the modulation of the gut microbiota.

 Life-style and dietary habits might be related to the incidence and severity of psoriasis.

The concept of the braingutmicrobiome was supported by preclinical studies published during the past decade.

Several types of neurotransmitters secreted by gut microbes were selected to investigate their potential function in psoriasis.

Microbiome-mediated interventions could be designed to manipulate these targets for the treatment of psoriasis.

Furthermore, studies also found that an important connection between emotional states and inflammatory skin conditions can be regulated by bacteria of the gastrointestinal tract.

Through an extensive review of the literature, we aim to discuss the skin and gut microbiota and redefine their role in the pathogenesis of psoriasis. 

With the help of Deniplant brand, Gheorghe Giurgiu has developed several nutraceuticals for psoriasis that act as immunomodulators of the human microbiome.

Hence, it is crucial to understand nutraceuticals impact on the psoriatic skin microbiota which is thought to be perturbed, our study provides insight into the skin microbiota in psoriasis and how it is modulated by nutraceuticals and diet.

Deniplant tea prevents and treats the internal causes that trigger and maintain psoriasis by naturally modulating the intestinal and skin microbiome

Removing dysbiosis from the intestinal microbiota can prevent and eliminate complications caused by psoriasis.

It contains cultivated medicinal plants, berries and flora, fruit tree buds.

With the understanding that the braingutskin axis exists, it is now clear that intestinal microbes have significant effects on psoriasis.

These results are supported by clinical observations based on a case series showing improvement in psoriatic skin lesions after antibiotic treatment, modulation of gut microbiota by probiotics or fecal microbial transplantation.

We confirmed the association of psoriasis and gut microbiota dysbiosis. 

 This study provides a detailed and comprehensive systematic review regarding gut microbiome in patients with psoriasis.

These results are supported by clinical observations based on a case series showing improvement in psoriatic skin lesions after modulation of gut microbiota by Deniplant nutraceuticals

Food choices can affect microbiome composition and improve the severity grade of psoriatic disease.

Because Deniplant treatment addresses the internal causes that trigger and maintain the disease, without ointments or other medications, its duration depends on how quickly the body resolves dysbiosis of the intestinal microbiome, and can be between 4-6 months. If the disease is older, the treatment can exceed 12 months.

After all the lesions healed, there were patients who never had psoriasis again, but there were also patients whose disease reappeared after 10-15 years.

Conclusion

 Unfortunately, the direct link between the skin microbiota and the pathogenesis of psoriasis remains to be clearly established.

The treatment of psoriasis, similar to other immune-mediated complex diseases, is limited to improving the symptoms, due to the lack of effective therapy.

 On the basis of these findings, the treatment of skin inflammation by nutraceuticals is favored, since its therapeutic management is simple, safe, and cheap.

References

Sikora M, Stec A, Chrabaszcz M. Gut Microbiome in Psoriasis: An Updated Review. Pathogens. 2020; 9(6): 463.

Hsu DK, Fung MA, Chen HL. Role of skin and gut microbiota in the pathogenesis of psoriasis, an inflammatory skin disease. Medicine in Microecology. 2020; 4: 100016

Shapiro J, Cohen NA, Shalev V, et al. Psoriatic patients have a distinct structural and functional fecal microbiota compared with controls. J. Dermatol. 2019; 46: 595-603.

Huang L, Gao R, Yu N, et al. Dysbiosis of gut microbiota was closely associated with psoriasis. Sci. China Life Sci.2019; 62: 807-815.

Raut G, Wairkar S.Management of psoriasis with nutraceuticals: An update. Complement Ther Clin Pract. 2018; 31: 25-30.

Damiani G, Bragazzi NL, McCormick TS, et al. Gut microbiota and nutrient interactions with skin in psoriasis: A comprehensive review of animal and human studies. World J Clin Cases. 2020; 8(6): 1002-1012.

Chen L, Li J, Zhu W. Skin and Gut Microbiome in Psoriasis: Gaining insight into the pathophysiology of it and finding novel therapeutic strategies. Front. Microbiol. 2020.