Results 181 to 190 of about 6,058 (204)
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Proliferating Trichilemmal Tumor with Apocrine Sweat Glands

The Journal of Dermatology, 1990
A 43-year-old man with a proliferating trichilemmal tumor is described. Since the tumor had appeared on a pre-existing alopecia and accompanied ectopic apocrine sweat glands, it is supposed that the pathogenesis of the tumor of our patient might be similar to that of an organoid nevus.
S, Dekio, C, Imaoka, J, Jidoi
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Apocrine Adenocarcinoma Arising in Moll Gland Cystadenoma

Ophthalmology, 1993
An 85-year-old woman had a bluish tumor medially on the margin of the left upper eyelid. Malignant melanoma of the conjunctiva was presumed; the lesion was excised and submitted for routine histopathologic examination. There are no signs of recurrence or metastatic disease after follow-up for 1 year.Light microscopy with routine and histochemical ...
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Diseases of the Apocrine Sweat Glands

1991
Figure 29.1 demonstrates the apocrine sweat glands as well as the eccrine glands covered in the next chapter. The apocrine sweat glands develop as part of the system of hair and sebaceous and apocrine glands. They are common in the axilla, anogenital region, periumbilical region, and on the nipples, and are occasionally found on the head and trunk. The
Otto Braun-Falco   +3 more
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Sweat Glands: Eccrine and Apocrine

1989
RAnvier (1879) distinguished two main classes of gland in mammalian skin, the “holocrine” glands (such as sebaceous glands), in which cellular disintegration provides the secretory material, and the “merocrine” glands, in which the cells do not lose their structural integrity.
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Apocrine Glands

1974
William Montagna, Paul F. Parakkal
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