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Medical uses of salicylic acid
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Salicylic acid is used as a medicine to help remove the outer layer of the skin.[1] As such it is used to treat warts, skin tags, calluses, psoriasis, dandruff, acne, ringworm, and ichthyosis.[1][2] For conditions other than warts, it is often used together with other medications.[2] It is applied to the area affected.[1]
Side effects include skin irritation, and salicylate poisoning.[2] Salicylate poisoning tends to only occur when applied to a large area and in children.[2] Use is thus not recommended in children less than two years old.[2] It comes in a number of different strengths.[3]
It is on the World Health Organization's List of Essential Medicines.[4] It is also available mixed with coal tar, zinc oxide, or benzoic acid.[3]
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Medical uses
Salicylic acid as a medication is used to help remove the outer layer of the skin.[1] As such it is used to treat warts, calluses, psoriasis, dandruff, acne, ringworm, and ichthyosis.[1][2]
Because of its effect on skin cells, salicylic acid is used in some shampoos to treat dandruff.[medical citation needed]
In modern medicine, salicylic acid and its derivatives are constituents of some "skin-reddening" products.[medical citation needed]
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Side effects
Concentrated solutions (20-30%) of salicylic acid may cause hyperpigmentation on people with darker skin types (Fitzpatrick phototypes IV, V, VI), without a broad spectrum sunblock.[5][6] Due to sun sensitivity, sun protection is recommended when using salicylic acid on sun-exposed skin.[7]
Pregnancy
No studies examine topical salicylic acid in pregnancy. The risks of aspirin late in pregnancy are probably not relevant for a topical exposure to salicylic acid, even late in the pregnancy, because of its low systemic levels. Topical salicylic acid is common in many over-the-counter dermatological agents and the lack of adverse reports suggests a low risk.[8]
Overdose
Side effects include skin irritation and salicylate poisoning.[2] Salicylate poisoning tends to only occur when applied to a large area and in children.[2] Use is thus not recommended in children less than two years old.[2] It comes in a number of different strengths.[3]
Salicylic acid overdose can lead metabolic acidosis with compensatory respiratory alkalosis. In people presenting with an acute overdose, a 16% morbidity rate and a 1% mortality rate are observed.[9]
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Mechanism of action
Salicylic acid works as a keratolytic, comedolytic and bacteriostatic agent, causing the cells of the epidermis to shed more readily, opening clogged pores and neutralizing bacteria within, preventing pores from clogging up again and allowing room for new cell growth.[10][11]
History
Dioscorides, in the first century AD, described the use of an extract of what might have been willow bark (a plant he called Itea),[12] 'being burnt to ashes, and steeped in vinegar,'[13] for taking away 'corns and other like risings in the feet and toes.' The active ingredient in this mixture could have been salicylic acid, but it is a modern myth that willow was ever used to ease aches and pains or reduce fevers.[10][14]
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References
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