PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Math can tell you how to manage your eczema

Insights from nonlinear dynamics answer questions of why flare-ups happen and how much medication to use.

2026-03-17
(Press-News.org) WASHINGTON, March 17, 2026 — Anyone with a chronic illness understands the struggle of living with a disease that is deeply unpredictable. Many such illnesses are characterized by long periods of remission broken up by sudden, debilitating flare-ups. Sometimes these flare-ups have obvious causes, but often they seem to come out of nowhere, which can be frustrating and unpleasant.

The solution might come from a complex field of mathematics called nonlinear dynamics. This field involves changing systems where the relationships between variables are not proportional. In a nonlinear system, a small change in one area might lead to a very large change somewhere else, something colloquially known as the butterfly effect. This makes nonlinear systems difficult to predict and challenging to study.

In Chaos, by AIP Publishing, a pair of researchers from Pusan National University in Korea and Arizona State University used the principles of nonlinear dynamics to calculate the minimal dose of medication required to treat atopic dermatitis, commonly referred to as eczema.

In health care, nonlinear dynamics are applied to study diseases in neurology, cardiology, endocrinology, and immunology.

“These applications illustrate a broader principle: Many chronic diseases can be interpreted as nonlinear dynamical systems operating near critical thresholds, where small physiological changes may lead to qualitatively different outcomes,” said author Yoseb Kang.

The researchers used their understanding of nonlinear dynamics to explore why eczema flare-ups happen and how to improve treatment outcomes.

“Instead of only describing disease evolution, we aimed to determine the minimal intervention required to deliberately move the system from a chronic state into remission and then maintain stability,” said Kang.

The duo divided their mathematical approach into two regimes: In the first, the goal of treatment is to suppress an active flare-up. The second regime is a long-term effort to keep eczema in remission and prevent future flare-ups. In both treatments, patients use medications to control the condition, and the amount of medication required is determined by the skin’s permeability and the patient’s immune response.

However, the researchers found the specifics were drastically different between the two regimes. In the first phase, the amount of antibiotics required scales proportionally and predictably with permeability and immune response.

But in the second phase, the relationship is highly nonlinear.

“In this regime, relatively small physiological changes can significantly increase the maintenance burden,” said Kang.

Tying treatment outcomes not just to medication dosage but also to patient-specific attributes can provide clarity to both patients and providers, and the predictive power of this analysis could help identify appropriate treatment plans.

“This framework may help explain why some patients require strong early intervention and why maintaining remission can sometimes demand sustained effort even after visible improvement,” said Kang. “In the longer term, if measurements of barrier function or immune markers are incorporated into models, treatment intensity could be adjusted more precisely to a patient’s physiological state.”

###

The article “Controlling severe atopic dermatitis dynamics” is authored by Yoseb Kang and Ying-Cheng Lai. It will appear in Chaos on March 17, 2026 (DOI: 10.1063/5.0308283). After that date, it can be accessed at https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0308283.

ABOUT THE JOURNAL

Chaos is devoted to increasing the understanding of nonlinear phenomena in all areas of science and engineering and describing their manifestations in a manner comprehensible to researchers from a broad spectrum of disciplines. See https://pubs.aip.org/aip/cha.

###

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Adherence to healthy lifestyle and risk of cardiometabolic diseases in individuals with hypertension

2026-03-17
About The Study: In this cohort study of individuals living with hypertension, maintaining a healthy lifestyle was associated with lower risk of major cardiometabolic diseases independent of antihypertensive medication use, underscoring the value of adopting multiple healthy lifestyle behaviors. A healthy lifestyle was defined as eating a high-quality diet, not smoking, engaging in moderate-to-vigorous-intensity physical activity, no more than moderate alcohol consumption, and having a healthy body mass index. Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Qi Sun, MD, ScD, email qisun@hsph.harvard.edu. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For ...

Past intensive whaling threatens the future of bowhead whales

2026-03-17
A unique collection of prehistoric bowhead whale bones, dating back 11,000 years, reveals a previously untold story of the relative impacts of humans on nature. The time series of ancient fossils show that commercial hunting of bowhead whales, which spanned 400 years and ceased less than a century ago in 1931, has left irreversible destructive traces in the species’ genetics. This could have serious consequences for the long-term vulnerability of the species. Researchers from the University of Copenhagen led an international team to study ...

Thoughts don’t kill people, but study suggests options for keeping guns from doing so

2026-03-17
Millions of Americans have thought about shooting someone, a new University of Michigan study finds. And if they didn’t already own a firearm, some of them have thought about getting one to make their thoughts a reality. Over 7% of adults in the United States say that at some time in their life, they have thought about shooting someone else. That percentage corresponds to 19.4 million people. Over 3%, or about 8.7 million adults, said they have thought of shooting someone in the last year. Firearm owners were no more likely to have had these thoughts than those who don’t own firearms, according to the findings published in the journal JAMA Network Open and based ...

Historian Lyndal Roper named 2026 Holberg Prize Laureate

2026-03-17
(BERGEN, Norway) – Today, the Holberg Prize—one of the largest international prizes awarded annually to an outstanding researcher in the humanities, social sciences, law or theology—named Australian scholar Lyndal Roper as its 2026 Laureate. Roper is the Regius Chair of History at the University of Oxford emeritus. She will receive the award of NOK 6,000,000 (approx. GBP 466,00 / USD 630,000) during a 4th June ceremony at the University of Bergen, Norway. Professor Roper is internationally recognized as one of the leading scholars of early modern European history. Her pioneering ...

Reconnecting kidney plumbing, the zebrafish way

2026-03-17
Reconnecting Kidney Plumbing, the Zebrafish Way MDI Bio Lab scientists discover how the fish solves a basic challenge in regenerative biology—insights in their newest publication in the journal Development could one day guide human repair. When the human kidney is damaged by conditions such as high blood pressure or the elevated blood sugar levels that accompany diabetes, it can lose some of its nephrons – the kidney’s basic waste-filtering units. Lose enough of them and kidney function falters, leading to the hallmarks ...

Biologically inspired event camera for accurate passive vibration measurement

2026-03-17
Tsukuba, Japan—Noncontact vibration measurement is essential for ensuring the safety and reliability of structures such as buildings, bridges, aircraft, and railway systems. Laser-based systems such as laser Doppler violometers provide accurate results but require expensive equipment and elaborate setup procedures. Camera-based vibration measurement has gained attention as a more affordable alternative. However, conventional cameras generate images by integrating light over a finite exposure time. To capture high-speed vibrations, the exposure time must be shortened, which reduces the amount of detectable light. Accordingly, the illumination must be significantly increased, ...

Single-cell transcriptomic analysis of the terminal ileum identifies BCMA as a therapeutic target in IgA nephropathy

2026-03-17
IgA nephropathy (IgAN) is the most common primary glomerulonephritis worldwide. For decades, the “gut-kidney axis” hypothesis has suggested that the disease begins not in the kidneys, but in the gut mucosa, where an abnormal immune response produces pathogenic galactose-deficient IgA1 (Gd–IgA1). However, current treatments mostly focus on suppressing inflammation in the kidney, failing to stop the production of harmful antibodies at their source. The precise cellular mechanisms within the gut of IgAN patients have remained a black box due to the challenges of obtaining and analyzing intestinal tissue.   In ...

Muscle-healing 'Ally' turns 'Enemy': A novel immune cell subset that controls muscle regeneration and ossification in FOP

2026-03-17
We have identified a macrophage population “Mrep” that plays an essential role in muscle repair. However, in Fibrodysplasia ossificans progressiva (FOP), Mrep functions as a pathogenic cell that triggers heterotopic ossification. These research findings would contribute not only to muscle regeneration therapy but also to the development of novel therapeutic approaches for FOP. Musculoskeletal disorders are a primary cause of disability worldwide, especially in aging societies like Japan. As individuals age, reductions in muscle mass ...

Waterpipe smoking can cause carbon monoxide poisoning even after brief use, during outdoor smoking, or through indoor secondhand exposure

2026-03-17
Tsukuba, Japan—Waterpipe tobacco smoking—also known as shisha, hookah, or narghile—is a method in which tobacco is heated with charcoal and the resulting smoke passes through water before being inhaled. Although the practice originated in the Middle East during the late Middle Ages, it poses a significant risk of carbon monoxide exposure because the charcoal used for heating produces CO through incomplete combustion. Within the jurisdiction of Tokyo's Third Fire District Headquarters, which covers three southwestern wards of Tokyo, emergency services recorded approximately one case of acute CO poisoning related to waterpipe ...

Impact of Japan's indoor smoke-free laws on the prevalence of smoke-free establishments

2026-03-17
Tsukuba, Japan—To reduce the adverse health effects associated with exposure to second-hand smoke, Japan fully enforced the Revised Health Promotion Law in April 2020, introducing a nationwide indoor smoking ban in restaurants and similar hospitality establishments. However, the law includes temporary exemptions that permit pre-existing small-scale restaurants and bars to allow indoor smoking, provided that individuals under the age of 20 are not exposed. To mitigate the potential public health impact of these exemptions, the Tokyo Metropolitan Government and Chiba City simultaneously implemented stricter passive smoking prevention ordinances designed to further ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Using AI to improve standard-of-care cardiac imaging 

Stanford researchers develop novel "scaffold-free" approach for treating damaged muscles

Qubits created using unexpected materials

Superconductor advance could unlock ultra-energy-efficient electronics

Closing your eyes might not help you hear better after all

New computational biology tool automates and standardizes genome sequencing analysis

Climate change is fueling disease outbreaks

Three anesthesia drugs all have the same effect in the brain, MIT researchers find

Violence against women who inject drugs

Math can tell you how to manage your eczema

Adherence to healthy lifestyle and risk of cardiometabolic diseases in individuals with hypertension

Past intensive whaling threatens the future of bowhead whales

Thoughts don’t kill people, but study suggests options for keeping guns from doing so

Historian Lyndal Roper named 2026 Holberg Prize Laureate

Reconnecting kidney plumbing, the zebrafish way

Biologically inspired event camera for accurate passive vibration measurement

Single-cell transcriptomic analysis of the terminal ileum identifies BCMA as a therapeutic target in IgA nephropathy

Muscle-healing 'Ally' turns 'Enemy': A novel immune cell subset that controls muscle regeneration and ossification in FOP

Waterpipe smoking can cause carbon monoxide poisoning even after brief use, during outdoor smoking, or through indoor secondhand exposure

Impact of Japan's indoor smoke-free laws on the prevalence of smoke-free establishments

New study fills research gap in food safety to better protect pregnant people from Listeria

PFAS exposure may weaken teens’ bones

Researchers develop promising new therapy for most common form of bone cancer in children and young adults

FAU-FWC Study: Endangered smalltooth sawfish make a comeback in a historical Florida nursery

Towards highly efficient selective hydrogenation: the role of single-atom catalysts

A theory of Alzheimer's disease linking amyloid beta and tau

Ultra-processed foods linked with serious heart problems

Routine blood pressure readings offer early insights on dementia risk

Shingles vaccine drastically cuts risk of serious cardiac events

A new bird species in Japan

[Press-News.org] Math can tell you how to manage your eczema
Insights from nonlinear dynamics answer questions of why flare-ups happen and how much medication to use.