The role of anger, type D personality, and alexithymia in the pathogenesis and process of psoriasis: a narrative review
Subject Areas : Thoughts and Behavior in Clinical PsychologyNazaninzeinab Jaberzadeh 1 , Mohammad Hossein Bayazi 2 , Vahid mashayekhi goyonlo 3 , Majid Anushiravani 4 , Monavvar Afzal-Aghaee 5
1 - Department of Health Psychology, Torbat Jam Branch, Islamic Azad University, Torbat Jam, Iran
2 - Iran, mashhad,faramarz 25 ,number 11
3 - Cutaneous Leishmaniasis Research Center, Mashhad University of Medical Sciences, Mashhad, Iran
4 - Department of Persian medicine, school of Persian and complementary medicine, Mashhad University of Medical Sciences, Mashhad, Iran
5 - Biostatistics and Epidemiology Department, School of health, Mashhad University of Medical Sciences, Mashhad, Iran
Keywords: Anger, Alexithymia, type D personality, psoriasis, Psychodermatology,
Abstract :
Clinical route of many dermatologic diseases is due to the mutual and complex interactions between biological, psychological, and social causes that can affect them as predisposing, accelerating, or enduring factors. Psoriasis is one of the most common autoimmune skin diseases with psychosomatic origins and consequences, which is accompanied by vulnerability to stress, emotional disorders, and difficulty in expressing negative feelings. Many psoriasis sufferers have problems in how much they experience anger and how to express and control anger. Two components of D personality including, negative emotionality, social inhibition, and emotional ataxia seem to be important in psoriasis. Due to the neglect of clinical researches and organized attention to the investigation and improvement of the psychological factors of this disease, a more comprehensive explanation of the occurrence of this disease with a more targeted interaction and integration of medical and psychological perspectives is nessesary. Theorethical and practical conjunction between dermatologists, psychologists and psychiatrics in the interdisciplinary field of psychodermatology can lead to maintain higher health services for psoriatic patients as well as achieving scientific outcomes.
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