Hello
So I am new here. I have mild psoriasis on my scalp, under my armpit and on my bikini line of all places 🙈 I have ruled out things grock itch etc whatever it is called, tried anti fungal creams etc. I purchased some H-Psoriasis oil stuff and it seems to have made a great improvement in the look of my skin, no redness. But the itching it still there. How can this be still there but the redness not? Is this normal? What can I do to stop it?
My sister recommended antihistamine tablets but I haven't searched the long term affects of using them.
Anyone else experienced this and found anything that works?
Posted Tue 26 Aug 2025 14.42 by roza1344
Living with psoriasis can be really frustrating, and I’m always searching for new treatment options that might help. I came across this page https://clinicaltrials.eu/trial-search/psoriasis/ , where I found clinical trials focused on psoriasis and potential new therapies.
I’m planning to check it out myself, and I thought it could be useful to share here for anyone else interested. Maybe this will bring some new possibilities for us.
Posted Mon 1 Sep 2025 13.59 by Acrazydoglady
Have a read of this from the USA site - https://www.psoriasis.org/psoriasis-and-the-mad-itch-transcript/ - I found this article very helpful, as I also suffer with the Koebner phenomenon, despite having cleared of psoriasis in certain places I can still get the mad itch and keep thinking it's coming back, but it isn't - I did try a variety of antihistamines, but they didn't work for me, occasionally I think I had the placebo effect - I do mindfulness (focus on the breath) to distract myself & tune out to the itch - hope you find something to help you too x
Posted Mon 1 Sep 2025 18.54 by OhNo_NotAgain? (edited Tue 2 Sep 2025 19.37 by OhNo_NotAgain?)
@AJ1986 : You could try antihistamine tablets just for a few days, to see if they reduce the itching. A paharmacist could advise if any particular antihistamine is likely to be most effective for itching. If they are going to be effective they will help after a few hours or a day or so at most. You do not need to commit to taking them long-term to discover if they help you.