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Healthy diet and other lifestyle changes that can improve psoriasis


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Making healthy choices: Taking good care of your health can reduce psoriasis flares.
Everyone can benefit from healthy habits like exercising and not smoking. If you have psoriasis, healthy habits have some extra benefits.

Quitting smoking

Researchers have found that smokers who have psoriasis and quit smoking can:

  • Reduce their risk of developing diseases of the heart, blood vessels, liver, and gums

  • Lessen their chance of developing an autoimmune disease like Crohn’s disease

  • Have fewer psoriasis flares

  • Have less palmoplantar psoriasis

  • Increase remissions (periods with little or no psoriasis)

Nicotine patch warning

Before using a nicotine patch, ask your dermatologist if the patch is the right choice for you. The nicotine patch may cause your psoriasis to flare.

Limit alcohol

Researchers have also found several benefits to limiting alcohol if you have psoriasis. These include:

  • Less psoriasis because treatment becomes more effective

  • Increased remissions

  • Reduced risk of developing psoriatic arthritis (for women) and fatty liver disease

  • Decreased risk of liver damage from psoriasis medications

Alcohol impact

Men who have more than 2 drinks per day and women who have more than 1 may see the following effects from drinking: 

  • Psoriasis treatment stops working — or doesn’t work as well

  • Fewer (or no) remissions (periods without psoriasis)

Maintain a healthy weight

If you are overweight, losing weight can: 

  • Reduce your psoriasis flares

  • Decrease the need for psoriasis medications

  • Improve how well your psoriasis treatment works

  • Decrease your risk of developing diseases associated with psoriasis, including heart disease, high blood pressure, unhealthy cholesterol levels, fatty liver disease, and diabetes.

Losing weight helps

After losing weight, many patients discover that their psoriasis medicine, which previously failed, begins to work.

Eat a healthy, balanced diet

Eating a healthy and balanced diet has benefits for everyone. If you have psoriasis, the benefits include:

  • Improve your health and help you feel better

  • Reduce your risk of developing diseases linked to psoriasis, including diabetes, heart disease, and high blood pressure.

Exercise

While exercise may seem impractical if you have psoriasis, working out can reduce some of psoriasis’s negative effects by helping you:

  • Lose weight or maintain a healthy weight

  • Reduce your risk of developing diseases linked to psoriasis, including fatty liver disease and heart disease

  • Reduce stress, depression, and anxiety

Reduce exercise pain

If you have pain while exercising, tell your dermatologist. You may be able to make some changes that can help prevent the pain while working out.

Get screened for related diseases

Getting screened can help you:

  • Find a disease early, when it can often be cured or managed successfully

  • Take steps to reduce the effects that the related disease has on your life

  • Allow you to use a psoriasis treatment that may help reduce the effects of a related disease (for example, some biologics that treat psoriasis may also reduce the risk for a heart attack)

Check your eyes

If you have severe psoriasis, your dermatologist may recommend that you see an eye doctor once or twice a year. This can find eye problems early.

See a dermatologist and keep your appointments

Psoriasis tends to be a lifelong condition. Dermatologists understand this disease and know how to treat it appropriately. A dermatologist can help you:

  • Find psoriasis treatment that’s right for you

  • Control psoriasis, which can prevent psoriasis from worsening and improve your quality of life

  • Assess your risk of developing related diseases and tell you when to get screenings for these diseases

  • Find early symptoms of psoriatic arthritis so that you can begin treatment

The impact that psoriasis has on your life can be significant. Making healthy lifestyle choices may reduce this impact.

Diseases more common in people who have psoriasis

If you have psoriasis, research shows that you may have a higher risk of developing the following:

  • Addiction to alcohol or tobacco

  • Crohn’s disease

  • Diabetes

  • High blood pressure

  • Eye problems

  • Gum disease

  • Heart and blood vessel diseases (heart attack, stroke)

  • Kidney disease

  • Liver disease

  • Mood disorder (anxiety, depression, thoughts of suicide)

  • Obesity

  • Psoriatic arthritis

  • Unhealthy cholesterol levels

The longer you have psoriasis, the greater your risk of developing related diseases. A healthy lifestyle, however, can reduce your risk. ​​

Related AAD resources


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Resources
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Antal M, Braunitzer G. “Smoking as a permissive factor of periodontal disease in psoriasis.” PLoS ONE 9(3): e92333.

Kimball AB, Gladman D, et. al. “National Psoriasis Foundation clinical consensus on psoriasis comorbidities and recommendations for screening.” J Am Acad Dermatol 2008;58(6):1031-42.

Lee MS, Lin RY, et al. “Increased risk of diabetes mellitus in relation to the severity of psoriasis, concomitant medication, and comorbidity: A nationwide population-based cohort study.” J Am Acad Dermatol. 2014;70(4):691-8.

Li W, Han J, et. al. “Smoking and risk of incident psoriasis among women and men in the United States: A combined analysis.” Am J Epidemiol. 2012;175(5):402-13.

Murzaku EC, Bronsnick T, et. al. “Diet in Dermatology: Part II, melanoma, chronic urticaria, and psoriasis.” J Am Acad Dermatol. 2014;71(6):1053.e1-1053.e16.

Neimann AL, Shin DB, et al. “Prevalence of cardiovascular risk factors in patients with psoriasis.” J Am Acad Dermatol 2006;55(5):829-35.

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Rehal B, Modjtahedi BS, et al. “Ocular psoriasis.” J Am Acad Dermatol. 2011 Dec;65(6):1202-12.

Richard MA, Barnetche T, et. al. “Psoriasis, cardiovascular events, cancer risk, and alcohol use: Evidence-based recommendations based on systematic review and expert opinion.” 

Schmitt J, Ford DE. “Psoriasis is independently associated with psychiatric morbidity and adverse cardiovascular risk factors, but not with cardiovascular events in a population-based sample.” J Eur Acad Dermatol Venereol. 2010;24(8):885-92.

Strohal R, Kirby B, et. al. “Psoriasis beyond the skin: An expert group consensus on the management of psoriatic arthritis and common co-morbidities in patients with moderate- to-severe psoriasis.”  J Eur Acad Dermatol Venereol. 2014;28(12):1661-9.

Villani AP, Rouzaud M, et al. “Prevalence of undiagnosed psoriatic arthritis among psoriasis patients: Systematic review and meta-analysis.” J Am Acad Dermatol 2015;73(2): 242–8.

Van der Voort EAM, Koehler EM, et al. “Psoriasis is independently associated with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease in patients 55 years old or older: Results from a population-based study.” J Am Acad Dermatol. 2014;70(3):517–24.

Wu, S, Cho E, et. al.  “Alcohol intake and risk of incident psoriatic arthritis in women.” J Rheumatol. 2015;42(5):835-40.

Zou L Lonne-Rahm SB, et al. “Alcohol intake measured by phosphatidylethanol in blood and the lifetime drinking history are correlated with the extent of psoriasis.” Dermatology. 2015;230(4):375-80.

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