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Respiratory and Allergic Disorders

Atopic Dermatitis

Biomarker testing clarifies the inflammatory drivers of atopic dermatitis, distinguishing allergic immune activity from systemic inflammation. Elevated eosinophils reflect Th2-driven allergy; CRP tracks overall inflammatory burden. At Superpower, we test eosinophils and C‑reactive protein (CRP) to map disease activity and guide personalized understanding.

With Superpower, you have access to a comprehensive range of biomarker tests.

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Key Benefits

  • Check allergic-type inflammation and flag infection during eczema flares.
  • Spot allergic immune activity that often drives eczema via eosinophil elevation.
  • Clarify whether a flare is allergic or infectious using CRP patterns.
  • Guide when to escalate anti-inflammatory care versus evaluate for infection.
  • Track disease activity and treatment response through eosinophil and CRP trends.
  • Flag possible coexisting asthma or allergies when eosinophils run persistently high.
  • Protect from unnecessary antibiotics by confirming low CRP during noninfectious flares.
  • Best interpreted with symptoms, skin exam, and total IgE.

What are Atopic Dermatitis

Atopic dermatitis biomarkers are measurable signals from your skin and immune system that reveal how active the disease is and what’s driving it. They capture the two core processes of eczema: a leaky skin barrier and allergic-type inflammation (type 2/Th2 immunity). In practical terms, biomarker testing can show whether your biology is dominated by allergy antibody activity (IgE), activated allergy cells (eosinophils), and inflammatory messengers (cytokines such as IL-4, IL-13, IL-22, IL-31), or by skin-targeting signals that draw immune cells into rashes (chemokines like TARC/CCL17). It can also reflect barrier protein status (filaggrin) and tissue stress (LDH). Together, these measurements create a biological fingerprint that helps confirm the inflammatory nature of your eczema, indicate severity, and identify which immune pathways are most active. That information supports choosing targeted treatments, aligning care with your specific disease mechanism, and tracking whether inflammation is settling or building over time. In short, biomarkers turn the “look” of eczema into objective biology you can monitor and act on.

Why are Atopic Dermatitis biomarkers important?

Atopic Dermatitis biomarkers capture how the immune system, skin barrier, and whole‑body inflammation are behaving. They translate the biology of itch, redness, and flares into measurable signals, helping distinguish allergic activity from infection and gauging how far beyond the skin the disease reaches.

Eosinophils reflect type‑2 (allergic/Th2) activation; typical values are roughly 0–500, and for most people with or without eczema, the healthiest pattern sits toward the low end. CRP reflects systemic innate inflammation; typical values are under 3, with optimal also low. When eosinophils trend high, people often experience more itch, thicker lesions, and may have coexisting asthma or hay fever. CRP that moves above the usual range in eczema often signals a flare with widespread inflammation or a superimposed infection; fatigue, feverishness, and tender, weeping skin can accompany this. Children commonly run slightly higher eosinophils during active atopy, and pregnancy can nudge CRP upward and shift immunity toward Th2, sometimes amplifying eczema.

When values are low—eosinophils near the bottom of the range and CRP low—type‑2 signaling and systemic inflammation are quiet. AD tends to be calmer: less itch, better sleep, and fewer secondary infections. In teens and adults, this pattern usually mirrors better barrier integrity; in pregnancy, low CRP is reassuring but needs context because baseline CRP can rise.

Big picture, these markers sit at the crossroads of skin, immune, and metabolic systems. Persistently high eosinophils link with broader allergic disease, while chronically elevated CRP points to systemic inflammatory load tied to cardiovascular and metabolic risk. Tracking them helps map disease activity, comorbidities, and long‑term health trajectory.

What Insights Will I Get?

Atopic dermatitis is a skin-centered disorder with whole‑body implications: it reflects immune polarization, barrier integrity, and the balance between local and systemic inflammation that can affect sleep, infection risk, and quality of life. Biomarker testing helps separate flare biology from background immune tone. At Superpower, we test Eosinophils and C‑reactive protein (CRP).

Eosinophils are allergy‑associated white blood cells that expand with type 2 immune activity (IL‑4/IL‑13/IL‑5). Many people with atopic dermatitis show eosinophilia, which can track with itch, rash extent, and comorbid atopy (asthma, rhinitis). CRP is a liver‑made acute‑phase protein that rises with systemic inflammation; in uncomplicated atopic dermatitis it is often normal or only mildly elevated, and marked increases usually suggest infection or another inflammatory driver.

For stability and healthy function, eosinophils in the reference range suggest restrained type 2 activity and a more stable skin barrier. A rising or persistently high eosinophil count points to ongoing allergic inflammation and higher flare propensity. A low CRP supports that inflammation is primarily cutaneous; sustained elevations in CRP are atypical for isolated atopic dermatitis and indicate broader systemic inflammation that may warrant attention to intercurrent illness.

Notes: Eosinophils are higher in early childhood and show diurnal variation. Parasitic disease, asthma, and allergic rhinitis can raise eosinophils; viral or bacterial infections elevate CRP. Pregnancy, obesity, and smoking influence CRP. Systemic corticosteroids and biologics can lower both markers. Assay methods and lab reference ranges vary.

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Frequently Asked Questions About Atopic Dermatitis

What is Atopic Dermatitis testing?

It’s blood testing that reads your immune and inflammation signals behind eczema. Superpower measures eosinophils (allergic/type 2 inflammation; absolute eosinophil count) and CRP (system-wide inflammation; acute-phase reactant). Together, they show if your skin flare is linked to allergic immune activity, broader systemic inflammation, or possible infection. These biomarkers support the clinical picture; they don’t diagnose eczema by themselves.

Why should I get Atopic Dermatitis biomarker testing?

It gives an objective read on immune activity driving your symptoms. Eosinophils reflect allergic/type 2 (Th2) signaling; CRP flags acute, systemic inflammation that may indicate infection or extensive disease. Tracking these over time helps separate a typical flare from complications and shows whether treatment is calming the underlying biology. Results complement, not replace, your clinical assessment.

How often should I test?

Get a baseline when your skin is stable. Recheck during a flare and after any major treatment change to see directionality, then periodically (for example, every 3–6 months) to track trends. Short-interval checks (about 4–12 weeks) can show early shifts in inflammation, while longer intervals confirm stability. Trends matter more than a single value.

What can affect biomarker levels?

Infections, recent injuries, or vaccinations raise CRP. Allergic exposures, asthma flares, parasitic infections, and some drugs shift eosinophils. Systemic corticosteroids and biologics can lower or transiently alter eosinophils and may reduce CRP. Time of day affects eosinophils (diurnal variation). Strenuous exercise, smoking, obesity, pregnancy, and chronic stress can increase inflammatory tone, especially CRP. Always interpret in clinical context.

Are there any preparations needed before Atopic Dermatitis biomarker testing?

No fasting is required. For a clean baseline, test when you’re not acutely ill and note current medications. Use a consistent draw time (morning is standard) to reduce diurnal effects on eosinophils. Avoid intense exercise just before the test and stay hydrated. Do not stop prescribed medicines unless your clinician has already directed that.

Can lifestyle changes affect my biomarker levels?

Yes. Factors that lower systemic inflammation tend to lower CRP, while reduced allergen/irritant exposure can lessen eosinophil activation. Sleep timing and circadian rhythm influence eosinophils. Smoking and excess adiposity heighten inflammatory signaling; recovery from strenuous exertion or acute stress can normalize transient CRP bumps. These biomarkers mirror whole‑body inflammatory load, not just the skin.

How do I interpret my results?

Higher eosinophils suggest active allergic/type 2 inflammation; very high levels warrant considering other causes (e.g., parasites, drug reactions). CRP is often normal in uncomplicated eczema; a marked rise points to systemic inflammation or infection rather than eczema alone. Normal values do not exclude disease. Serial changes aligned with symptoms and treatment give the clearest picture. Superpower reports eosinophils and CRP with reference ranges to guide context.

How do I interpret my results?

Higher eosinophils suggest active allergic/type 2 inflammation; very high levels warrant considering other causes (e.g., parasites, drug reactions). CRP is often normal in uncomplicated eczema; a marked rise points to systemic inflammation or infection rather than eczema alone. Normal values do not exclude disease. Serial changes aligned with symptoms and treatment give the clearest picture. Superpower reports eosinophils and CRP with reference ranges to guide context.

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