Dynamics in Atopic dermatitis Systems
Model
The following nonsmooth dynamic system is referred to as the Atopic dermatitis System. This system is controlled by two types of switches: the reversible switch and the irreversible switch . Here, represents a very short time interval. According to the -switch, is given as follows.
Variables
- : The amount of pathogen infiltrated. It is affected by the given environment and is reduced as the skin barrier strengthens.
- : The strength of the Barrier. Closer to indicates a healthier skin condition, while closer to indicates a poorer skin condition.
- : The concentration of Dendritic Cells in lymph nodes. If this value exceeds a certain level, the -switch is turned on.
- : The sensitivity of receptors characterizing the -switch. It activates when pathogen exceeds a certain level, contributes to reducing , and also damages the skin barrier. It turns off when decreases below a certain level, making it a reversible switch.
- : Involved in immune regulation, the -switch. It turns on when exceeds the manageable limit and remains on permanently. Once the -switch is activated, it negatively affects the skin barrier’s ability to recover permanently.
- : The amount of Kallikrein, an enzyme that releases kinins from the plasma. It activates when the -switch is on, damaging the skin barrier.
Parameters
Description
Mathematical modeling of Atopic dermatitis or Atopic Eczema was proposed in a paper by Elisa Domínguez-Hüttinger et al., published in the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology (JACI)1, and has been a subject of ongoing research by the Tanaka group2 and actively researched in Korea by Dr. Kang Yoseph and others3.
The Two Switches
While the -switch and the -switch may look complicated in their mathematical expressions, they can be simplified into the form shown above when drawn. Due to both the values of and and the state of the switches at that moment, the AD system is not strictly defined by a vector field but becomes a piecewise smooth system3. Depending on the on/off state of the two switches, there are four possible scenarios, each of which can be represented as four smooth subsystems.
-Subsystem: ,
-Subsystem: ,
-Subsystem: ,
-Subsystem: ,
Bifurcation
The Codimension-2 bifurcation diagram for the two parameters Barrier permeability and Immune responses is shown above. The time evolutions within each of the four regions of the diagram can be broadly categorized into four types.
- (1) Converging to a stable point where the skin barrier fully recovers
- (4) Converging to a stable point where the skin barrier sustains chronic damage
- (2) Depending on the initial conditions, either recovering or sustaining chronic damage, bistability
- (3) Oscillating oscillation between where the condition of the skin barrier fluctuates between improvement and deterioration
This can be seen as a dynamical analysis of the progression of atopy based on innate conditions , , and given circumstances. Subsequent studies have drawn more detailed bifurcation diagrams or have identified oscillations subdivided into mild and severe for precision analysis.
Domínguez-Hüttinger, E., Christodoulides, P., Miyauchi, K., Irvine, A. D., Okada-Hatakeyama, M., Kubo, M., & Tanaka, R. J. (2017). Mathematical modeling of atopic dermatitis reveals “double-switch” mechanisms underlying 4 common disease phenotypes. Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, 139(6), 1861-1872. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaci.2016.10.026 ↩︎
Tanaka, G., Domínguez-Hüttinger, E., Christodoulides, P., Aihara, K., & Tanaka, R. J. (2018). Bifurcation analysis of a mathematical model of atopic dermatitis to determine patient-specific effects of treatments on dynamic phenotypes. Journal of Theoretical Biology, 448, 66-79. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jtbi.2018.04.002 ↩︎
Kang, Y., Lee, E. H., Kim, S. H., Jang, Y. H., & Do, Y. (2021). Complexity and multistability of a nonsmooth atopic dermatitis system. Chaos, Solitons & Fractals, 153, 111575. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chaos.2021.111575 ↩︎ ↩︎