Find information on thousands of medical conditions and prescription drugs.

Fluocinonide

Fluocinonide (a corticosteroid) constitute a class of primatily synthetic steroids used topically as an anti-inflamatory and anti-pruritic agents. more...

Home
Diseases
Medicines
A
B
C
D
E
F
Captagon
Famohexal
Famotidine
Faslodex
Faslodex
Fasoracetam
Felbamate
Felbatol
Felodipine
Felypressin
Femara
Femara
Fempatch
Femring
Fenfluramine
Fenofibrate
Fentanyl
Fexofenadine
Filgrastim
Filipin
Finasteride
Fioricet
Fiorinal
Flagyl
Flarex
Flavoxate
Flecainide
Flexeril
Flomax
Flonase
Flovent
Floxuridine
Fluacizine
Flucloxacillin
Fluconazole
Flucytosine
Fludarabine
Fludrocortisone
Flumazenil
Flunisolide
Flunitrazepam
Fluocinonide
Fluohexal
Fluorometholone
Fluorouracil
Fluoxetine
Fluphenazine
Flurazepam
Flutamide
Fluticasone
Fluvastatin
Fluvoxamine
FML
Focalin
Folic acid
Follutein
Fomepizole
Formoterol
Fortamet
Fortovase
Fosamax
Fosinopril
Fosinoprilat
Fosmidomycin
Fosphenytoin
Frova
Frovatriptan
Frusehexal
Fulvestrant
Fumagillin
Furazolidone
Furosemide
Furoxone
Fusafungine
Fusidic acid
Fuzeon
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z

<chemical> 6α,9-difluoro-11β,16α,17,21-tetrahydroxypregna-1,4-diene-3,20-dione, cyclic 16,17-acetal with acetone,21-acetate. A topical glucocorticoid used in the treatment of eczemas.

Pharmacological action: anti-allergic agents, steroidal anti-inflammatory agents, glucocorticoids, synthetic, glucocorticoids, topical.

Chemical name: Pregna-1,4-diene-3,20-dione, 21-(acetyloxy)-6,9-difluoro-11-hydroxy-16,17-((1-methylethylidene)bis(oxy))-, (6α, 11β, 16α) -

Molecular Formula: C26H32F2O7

Mol. Wt: 494.53

Read more at Wikipedia.org


[List your site here Free!]


Recurring complex aphthosis can be easily mistaken for fatal Behcet's disease
From OB/GYN News, 4/15/05 by Jane Salodof MacNeil

HOUSTON -- Strict adherence to diagnostic criteria for Behcet's disease can lead physicians to misdiagnose patients who actually have complex aphthosis, Peter J. Lynch, M.D., warned at a conference on vulvovaginal diseases sponsored by Baylor College of Medicine.

Oral and genital ulcers characterize both conditions, but classic Behcet's disease typically leads to blindness and death, said Dr. Lynch, a professor emeritus at the University of California, Davis.

Though recurring and troublesome, complex aphthosis is a far more benign disorder.

"In the United States and Western Europe, complex aphthosis is usually not associated with systemic symptoms and signs. That's important, because I don't want these women labeled with Behcet's disease that they don't really have," Dr. Lynch said.

"If they tell their primary care doctors that they have Behcet's disease or if they go online and look up Behcet's disease," he warned, "they're going to be overwhelmed with the fact that they are going to be dead in a couple of years, and they are going to have terrible brain disease, and they are going to go blind. This is very frightening."

Dr. Lynch traced the overlap to diagnostic criteria developed in 1990 by the International Study Group for Behcet's Disease (Lancet 1990;335:1078-80). Although other criteria have since been written to avert confusion, he said, the original ISGBD guidelines are still widely used.

If patients with complex aphthosis are to be included in the Behcet's disease spectrum, Dr. Lynch suggested the "Western" form of the disease be distinguished from the "Eastern" form, which he characterized as classic Behcet's disease.

He contrasted the two forms as follows:

* The Eastern form occurs along the "Silk Road" from Asia to Eastern Europe; the Western form presents in Western Europe and North America.

* Men outnumber women among patients with the Eastern form; women are more likely to be affected in the West.

* Central nervous system involvement occurs only in the Eastern form.

* Posterior eye inflammation often leads to blindness with the Eastern form of the condition. Anterior eye disease sometimes occurs with the Western form, but is less severe and rarely, if ever, leads to vision loss.

* The HLA-B51 haplotype is almost always positive with the Eastern form. People with this haplotype are much more likely to develop Behcet's disease if they live along the Silk Road (relative risk about 6.0) than in Western countries (relative risk about 1.5).

* Prognosis is poor in the East, good in the West.

Complex aphthosis has a nonspecific histology and is usually diagnosed by ruling out other conditions, according to Dr. Lynch. These ulcers can appear simultaneously in oral and genital locations, but are often independent of each other. "Almost always you will get a history of oral ulcers in the past, but they don't come out exactly at the same time," he said.

Comparing aphthosis major ulcers to ordinary canker sores, Dr. Lynch said the former are larger, longer lasting, and more painful. The aphthosis ulcers also heal with some scarring and are more likely to appear on mucosa in women and on skin in men.

"There are no good age data, but in my own practice over the years I am impressed with number of very young women from age 13 to about 20 who develop this," he said.

Dr. Lynch said most lesions respond within a few days to topical application of high potency steroids such as fluocinonide and clobetasol. He also recommended lidocaine or sucralfate for pain relief, and suggested 5 mg/cc of triamcinolone acetonide for larger ulcers and ulcers that do not respond to topical steroids.

For systemic therapy, Dr. Lynch proposed 7-10 days of treatment with systemic steroids. Dapsone, colchicine, pentoxifylline, and thalidomide can be effective for episodic treatment and prophylaxis, he said, warning against the use of thalidomide and other tumor necrosis factors in women who are of childbearing age.

BY JANE SALODOF MACNEIL

Contributing Writer

COPYRIGHT 2005 International Medical News Group
COPYRIGHT 2005 Gale Group

Return to Fluocinonide
Home Contact Resources Exchange Links ebay