Contact Dermatitis
Occupational skin irritant/allergen exposure and deployment conditions associated with eczema and contact/atopic dermatitis in service members.
38 CFR diagnostic code 7806
Peer-reviewed evidence (5)
The verified studies behind a Contact Dermatitis claim — each links to its real PubMed or DOI record. These are sources our nexus drafts can draw from; none are invented.
- Riegleman KL, Farnsworth GS, Wong EB. Atopic dermatitis in the US military. Cutis. 2019;104(3):144-147. PMID:31675397.
- Ispireli M, Buchukuri I, Ebanoidze T, Durglishvili G, Durglishvili N, Chkhikvishvili N, Beridze L. CORRELATES OF ATOPIC DERMATITIS CHARACTERISTICS IN MILITARY PERSONNEL. Georgian Med News. 2023;(343):33-37. PMID:38096512.
- Russell A, Williamson S, Rosenberg A, Cho S. Reappraising the Use of Systemic Immunomodulators for Psoriasis and Eczema in the Military. Mil Med. 2024;189(11-12):e2374-e2381. PMID:38607726. doi:10.1093/milmed/usae139.
- Karagounis TK, Cohen DE. Occupational Hand Dermatitis. Curr Allergy Asthma Rep. 2023;23(4):201-212. PMID:36749448. doi:10.1007/s11882-023-01070-5.
- Jacobsen G, Rasmussen K, Bregnhøj A, Isaksson M, Diepgen TL, Carstensen O. Causes of irritant contact dermatitis after occupational skin exposure: a systematic review. Int Arch Occup Environ Health. 2022;95(1):35-65. PMID:34665298. doi:10.1007/s00420-021-01781-0.
Controlling law
The CFR sections and cases the theories relevant to this condition rest on — the legal standard raters evaluate against, never a prediction about any claim.
Direct (§ 3.303)
Regulation
38 C.F.R. § 3.303
Direct service connection — a current disability linked to service. (Continuity of symptomatology under § 3.303(b) is limited by case law to the § 3.309(a) chronic diseases — Walker.)
Case law
Shedden v. Principi, 381 F.3d 1163 (Fed. Cir. 2004)
The three-element test: current disability, in-service event, and a nexus between them.
Holton v. Shinseki, 557 F.3d 1363 (Fed. Cir. 2009)
Federal Circuit restatement of the same three direct-service-connection elements.
Caluza v. Brown, 7 Vet. App. 498 (1995)
The evidentiary framework a rater weighs each element against.
Walker v. Shinseki, 708 F.3d 1331 (Fed. Cir. 2013)
Continuity of symptomatology (§ 3.303(b)) is available ONLY for a chronic disease listed in § 3.309(a); any other condition must use the medical-nexus pathway.
Davidson v. Shinseki, 581 F.3d 1313 (Fed. Cir. 2009)
A categorical 'a medical opinion is always required for nexus' is legal error — competent lay evidence can suffice.
Jandreau v. Nicholson, 492 F.3d 1372 (Fed. Cir. 2007); Layno v. Brown, 6 Vet. App. 465 (1994)
A veteran is competent to report symptoms they personally observe (Layno), and lay evidence can even establish a simple diagnosis in the right case (Jandreau).
McLendon v. Nicholson, 20 Vet. App. 79 (2006)
A LOW threshold — evidence that merely indicates a nexus MAY exist obligates VA to provide a C&P exam.
38 U.S.C. § 5107(b); Gilbert v. Derwinski, 1 Vet. App. 49 (1990)
When the evidence is in relative equipoise, the tie goes to the veteran — the preponderance must be AGAINST the claim to deny it.
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