Results 121 to 130 of about 455 (167)
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Kaposi's Varicelliform Eruption

New England Journal of Medicine, 1949
IN 1944 Dr. Herbert A. Wenner1 wrote: "The integument of infants and children ill with eczema is frequently infected by bacterial opportunists and less frequently by filtrable viruses." The former is easily recognized; the latter, because of its infrequent occurrence, may easily be overlooked. The case presented below is that of an eight-month-old baby
S S, FREEDMAN, J T, BARRETT
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Kaposi's Varicelliform Eruption

Archives of Dermatology, 1957
In the present communication, two cases of Kaposi's varicelliform eruption occurring in adults will be described. The first ended fatally, and specialized animal laboratory studies or autopsy findings were nonobtainable. From the second case a viral agent from the cutaneous lesions was isolated.
G B, SEXTON, N A, LABZOFFSKY, W G, ROSS
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KAPOSI'S VARICELLIFORM ERUPTION

American Journal of Diseases of Children, 1946
KAPOSI'S varicelliform eruption was first described in 1887, 1 as a rare and dramatic complication of infantile eczema. Since the original description, other, more descriptive, names have been given to this condition, such as acute vacciniform pustulosis or acute varioliform pustulosis. It occurs in persons who have been suffering from some dermatosis,
W A, JAQUETTE   +2 more
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Adult Kaposi's Varicelliform Eruption

Australasian Journal of Dermatology, 1969
Summary Kaposi's Varicelliform Eruption is described and discussed. An account is given of a proven herpes simplex infection occuring in a 57 years old woman on areas which had been affected by a dermatitis four years previously but not since. No other case of this type has been found in the literature.
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KAPOSI'S VARICELLIFORM ERUPTION

American Journal of Diseases of Children, 1935
As a definite entity occupying a place among accepted cutaneous diseases, Kaposi's varicelliform eruption may not yet have acquired recognition. As a clearcut picture, easily recognizable as a certain complication of infantile eczema, it would seem to deserve a niche among the rarer dermatoses.
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KAPOSI'S VARICELLIFORM ERUPTION

Archives of Dermatology and Syphilology, 1944
In his textbook published toward the close of the nineteenth century Kaposi 1 described a complication of infantile eczema, not previously recorded, based on his observation of 10 patients with a "varicelliform eruption." His description has scarcely been improved on in the subsequent half century. Inasmuch as the disease is rare, even in childhood, we
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Kaposi's Varicelliform Eruption

Archives of Dermatology, 1990
The eponym Kaposi's varicelliform eruption (KVE) describes a characteristic syndrome of disseminated vesicopustules that occasionally complicates a number of dermatoses. Among these, the most common is atopic dermatitis, and the inciting agent is most often herpes simplex virus (HSV).
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Kaposi's varicelliform eruption.

JAMA, 1967
Numerous vesicles and pustules superimposed on underlying dry eczematous dermatitis suddenly developed in a child with infantile eczema (Figure). A diagnosis of "bacterial infection" led to antibiotic therapy but the lesions continued to spread and were unresponsive to a second antibiotic.
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