Chemical
Chemical irritant contact dermatitis is either acute or chronic, which is usually associated with strong and weak irritants respectively. The following definition is provided by Mathias and Maibach (1978): The mechanism of action varies. Detergents, surfactants, extremes of pH, and organic solvents all directly affecting the barrier properties of the epidermis. These effects include removing fat emulsion, defatting of dermal lipids, inflicting cellular damage on the epithelium, and increasing the transepidermal water loss by damaging the horny layer water-binding mechanisms and damaging the DNA, which causes the layer to thin. Concentrated irritants have an acute effect, but this is not as common as the accumulative, chronic effect of irritants whose deleterious effects build up with subsequent doses (ESCD 2006). Chemical irritants are often strongPhysical
Physical irritant contact dermatitis is a less-researched form of irritant contact dermatitis due to its various mechanisms of action and a lack of a test for its diagnosis.Low humidity
Low humidity from air conditioning was found to be the most common cause of physical irritant contact dermatitis. To the lay person a definition of low humidity being a ''physical'' irritant can be confusing because low humidity is a deficit (or absence) of an elemental substance, whereas all other irritants implicated in contact dermatitis are in concentrations of relative abundance. So the irritant is actually a lack of water vapour. This confusion is further compounded with the use of the term ''contact'' implying 'touching' (as is the case with all other forms of physical irritant contact dermatitis) whereas in the case of low humidity physical irritant contact dermatitis there is an ''absence of contact'' with water vapour.Plants
Many plants cause irritant contact dermatitis through their spines or irritant hairs. Some plants such as the buttercup, spurge, and daisy act by chemical means. The sap of these plants contains a number of alkaloids, glycosides,Treatment
A humidifier can be used to prevent low indoor humidity during winter (especially with indoor heating), and dry season.References
External links
{{DEFAULTSORT:Irritant Contact Dermatitis Contact dermatitis