Publications
Publications, Books, Book Chapters and Reviews by Prof. Marcus Maurer, MD
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Chronic spontaneous urticaria in children: Itching for insight
Filename | 50. Church et al, CSU in children PAI 2011 Review.pdf |
Filesize | 189.34 KB |
Version | r.050 |
Date added | June 26, 2020 |
Downloaded | 0 times |
Category | Reviews |
Authors | Church, M. K., Weller, K., Stock, P., and Maurer, M. |
Citation | Church, M. K., Weller, K., Stock, P., and Maurer, M.: Chronic spontaneous urticaria in children: itching for insight. Pediatr. Allergy Immunol. 2011: 22; 1-8. |
Corresponding authors | Church, M. K. |
DocNum | R.50 |
DocType | |
Edition; Page | 22; 1-8 |
IF | 2.45 |
Publisher | Pediatr. Allergy Immunol. |
ReleaseDate | 2011 |
While there is increasing information about the pathogenesis and treatment of chronic spontaneous urticaria (csU) in adults, there is little published information about csU in children. Consequently, most of the recommendations contained in current guidelines for the prevention and treatment of csU in infants and children is based on extrapolation of data obtained in adults. To rectify this, this review points out critical gaps in our knowledge and suggests strategies which may help us to
improve our understanding of this condition. How common is csU in children? What do we know about its clinical presentation and the presence of useful biomarkers? What are its common underlying causes? What is the course of csU in children? How does csU affect the everyday life of children? What treatment options are available for children? To answer these questions, two separate types of information are required. The first is information about the prevalence of the condition in the community at large and how csU affects the everyday life of both the childpatient and the parent or carer. Because most csU cases in infants and children do not come to specialists but are treated by general practitioners or by parents using over-the-counter medications, these questions may be answered only by general population surveys or schools programmes. The second is clinical information including family history and disease presentation, the presence of biomarkers and comorbidities, objective measures of severity, frequency and duration of exacerbations, the response to therapy and the time to remission. Targeted questionnaires need to be developed and validated for these investigations. This has already begun in Germany with the establishment of the CU-KID Netzwerk (Email address: cu-kid@charite.de), the aim of which is to identify clinical centres and colleagues who treat children with urticaria and to initiate the information gathering described above.
(Last update: 12.2023)
Number of original publications in peer-reviewed journals: | 580 |
Number of reviews in peer-reviewed journals: | 210 |
Number of publications (original work and reviews) in peer-reviewed journals: | 790 |
Cumulative IF for original publications in peer-reviewed journals: | 4196.39 |
Cumulative IF for reviews in peer-reviewed journals: | 1409.32 |
Cumulative IF of publications (original work & reviews) in peer-reviewed journals: | 5605.71 |
Total number of citations: 36,836, h-index: 99 (Web of Science December 2023) | 36836 |
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