Results 161 to 170 of about 1,446 (206)
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Follicular Mucinosis: Response to Indomethacin
Journal of Dermatology, 1988AbstractA patient with follicular mucinosis was treated topically and orally with indomethacin. He had generalized plaques and grouped follicular papules but no signs of cutaneous lymphoma. The skin lesions responded favorably to topical application. Oral administration produced a dramatic improvement.
H, Kodama, S, Umemura, N, Nohara
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Follicular mucinosis: a review
International Journal of Dermatology, 2020AbstractFollicular mucinosis (FM) is an epithelial reaction pattern characterized by follicular mucin accumulation. It has been described in association with various inflammatory and neoplastic cutaneous disorders. FM is generally divided into a primary benign idiopathic form and a secondary form usually occurring in association with cutaneous ...
Joanna, Khalil +2 more
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Ultrastructure of Follicular Mucinosis
Journal of Cutaneous Pathology, 1974Electron microscopic study of follicular mucinosis revealed, in the affected hair follicles, disappearance of cell organelles, granular agglutination of the cytoplasmic matrices and the nuclear chromatin usually connected with tonofilaments. Myelin figures and onion‐like aggregations of low‐electron‐density lamellar structures were found in the areas ...
A, Ishibashi, T, Chujo
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Acneiform follicular mucinosis
Clinical and Experimental Dermatology, 2004Follicular mucinosis is a rare chronic inflammatory disease of unknown aetiology, presenting as mucin deposits around the follicles and sebaceous glands. It can progress to alopecia of the scalp and other hairy areas. Follicular mucinosis may be a benign primary idiopathic disorder or secondary to malignant lymphoproliferative disorders. It can present
E M C, Passaro +2 more
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The American Journal of Dermatopathology, 1985
Follicular mucinosis is a histologic term for a reaction pattern in follicular epithelium. Although it is the sine qua non for alopecia mucinosa as a disease sui generis, it may occur in a variety of unrelated conditions, which may be inflammatory, hamartomatous, hyperplastic, or neoplastic. Follicular mucinosis is rare in plaque and nodular lesions of
R W, Hempstead, A B, Ackerman
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Follicular mucinosis is a histologic term for a reaction pattern in follicular epithelium. Although it is the sine qua non for alopecia mucinosa as a disease sui generis, it may occur in a variety of unrelated conditions, which may be inflammatory, hamartomatous, hyperplastic, or neoplastic. Follicular mucinosis is rare in plaque and nodular lesions of
R W, Hempstead, A B, Ackerman
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Eccrine proliferation with follicular mucinosis
Journal of Cutaneous Pathology, 1987Proliferation of the eccrine sweat duct epithelium has been associated with skin tumors, especially keratoacanthomas and basal cell carcinomas. We report our observations on the extensive sweat gland changes in a patient who had idiopathic follicular mucinosis.
T G, Berger, D K, Goette
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Urticaria-Like Follicular Mucinosis
Dermatology, 1985Two middle-aged men with a cyclic eruption of transient urticarial papules of the face are described. Deposits of mucinous material were observed in cycstic spaces in their hair follicles. In direct immunofluorescence cells bearing IgE and C1q were found scattered in the dermis and were identified as mast-cells. Both patients experienced some relief of
F, Crovato +3 more
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Follicular Mucinosis in Alopecia Areata
The American Journal of Dermatopathology, 1992The pathological features of alopecia areata were described in association with those of follicular mucinosis in the scalp pathology of an 18-year-old woman. The immunohistochemical picture of the inflammatory infiltrate showed a high CD4/CD8 ratio (25:1), which was significantly different from the CD4/CD8 ratio in patients with alopecia areata.
P A, Fanti +5 more
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Follicular Mucinosis of Childhood and Adolescence
Pediatric Dermatology, 1988Abstract: We cared for nine patients who were less than 21 years old at the time of diagnosis of follicular mucinosis. Four had clearing of the lesions, four did not, and one was lost to follow‐up. Follicular mucinosis, even in childhood, may be persistent and be associated with lymphoma, which can result in death. Because there is no clinical pattern
L E, Gibson, S A, Muller, M S, Peters
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Follicular Mucinosis (Alopecia Mucinosa)
Archives of Dermatology, 1962Alopecia mucinosa is a disease of unknown etiology, characterized clinically by plaques of folliculopapules and histologically by mucinosis of the pilosebaceous unit. Although Kreibich 1 had reported a single case in 1926 and Lehner and Szodoray 2 did so in 1939, Pinkus 3 in 1957 was first to regard the condition as an entity and propose its name ...
R, KIM, R K, WINKELMANN
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