Results 221 to 230 of about 71,525 (243)
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Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, 1969
Allergy to shoes is a fairly common problem in a dermatologist's practice. In a five-vear period 43 cases were documented. Shoe dermatitis is often incorrectly diagnosed as fungus infection, atopic eczema, or psoriasis. Employing only clinical criteria in the diagnosis of foot dermatoses can be misleading since shoe contact dermatitis may involve such "
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Allergy to shoes is a fairly common problem in a dermatologist's practice. In a five-vear period 43 cases were documented. Shoe dermatitis is often incorrectly diagnosed as fungus infection, atopic eczema, or psoriasis. Employing only clinical criteria in the diagnosis of foot dermatoses can be misleading since shoe contact dermatitis may involve such "
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PROPARACAINE CONTACT DERMATITIS
Archives of Dermatology, 1969To the Editor.— For the past several years we have been involved in a program requiring measurements of intraocular pressure (IOP) in rabbits, dogs, and cats. In the course of this time, involving 100 to 200 IOP measurements daily, using proparacaine as the topical anesthetic, we have observed local contact dermatitis manifested by dryness and ...
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Contact Dermatitis, 1980
Contact urticaria appears either as wheal and flare reactions or as dermatitis resembling other types of contact dermatitis. A nonimmunologic form of contact urticaria is seen more frequently than the allergic form of the disease in experimental conditions. However, the immunologic form of contact urticaria is clinically more important.
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Contact urticaria appears either as wheal and flare reactions or as dermatitis resembling other types of contact dermatitis. A nonimmunologic form of contact urticaria is seen more frequently than the allergic form of the disease in experimental conditions. However, the immunologic form of contact urticaria is clinically more important.
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[Airborne contact dermatitis].
La Clinica terapeutica, 2006A comprehensive bibliographical retrieval of case reports on "airborne contact dermatitis" (ACD) was performed. The present review deals with the first cases published in 1986, 1991, 2001 by Huygens as well as by Dooms-Goossens, and continues with the other pertaining clinical presentations until to day.
PROIETTI, Lidia +5 more
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