The diagnosis, management and prevention of intertrigo in adults: a review

Author:

Romanelli Marco1,Voegeli David2,Colboc Hester3,Bassetto Franco4,Janowska Agata1,Scarpa Carlotta4,Meaume Sylvie3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Dermatology, University of Pisa, Italy

2. Faculty of Health & Wellbeing, University of Winchester, UK

3. Department of Geriatrics and Wound Healing, University of Sorbonne, Rothschild Hospital, Paris, France

4. Department of Plastic Surgery, University of Padua, Italy

Abstract

Intertrigo is a common inflammatory skin disorder caused by skin-on-skin friction in skin folds, due to moisture becoming trapped because of poor air circulation. This can occur in any area of the body where two skin surfaces are in close contact with each other. The aim of this scoping review was to systematically map, review and synthesise evidence on intertrigo in adults. We identified a wide range of evidence and performed a narrative integration of this related to the diagnosis, management and prevention of intertrigo. A literature search was conducted within the following databases: Cochrane Library, MEDLINE, CINAHL, PubMed and EMBASE. After reviewing articles for duplicates and relevance, 55 articles were included. The incorporation of intertrigo in the ICD-11 provides a clear definition and should improve the accuracy of estimates. With regards to the diagnosis, prevention and management of intertrigo, the literature demonstrates consensus among health professionals in approach and this forms the basis for the recommendations of this review: identify predisposing factors and educate patient in reducing these; educate patients in skin fold management and adopt structured skin care routine; treat secondary infection with appropriate topical agent; consider using moisture-wicking textiles within skin folds to reduce skin-on-skin friction, wick away moisture and reduce secondary infection. Overall, the quality of evidence on which to determine the strength of any recommendations for practice remains low. There remains the need for well-designed studies to test proposed interventions and build a robust evidence base.

Publisher

Mark Allen Group

Subject

Nursing (miscellaneous),Fundamentals and skills

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