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Palmoplantar Keratodermas

Clinics in Dermatology, 2005
The palmoplantar skin is a highly specialized tissue which is able to resist mechanical trauma and other physical stress. In recent years the more descriptive classification of keratodermas has switched to an exact molecular genetic view where gene functions are considered.
Peter H, Itin, Susanna K, Fistarol
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Circumscribed Palmoplantar Hypokeratosis

Clinics in Dermatology, 2021
Circumscribed palmoplantar hypokeratosis (CPH) is a rare acquired dermatosis first described in 2002. It affects mostly the thenar or hypothenar eminences of the palm of middle-aged or elderly women and manifests clinically with sharply limited, annular erythematous plaques with a depressed surface, rimmed by a slightly raised, keratotic border ...
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Palmoplantar psoriasis

Clinics in Dermatology, 2017
Palmoplantar psoriasis refers to a localized psoriasis variant. The disease can be associated with many clinical forms, including predominantly pustular lesions to thick scaly, hyperkeratotic plaques, or an overlapping of both of them. Palmoplantar psoriasis accounts for 3-4% of all psoriasis cases in most studies.
Burhan, Engin   +2 more
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Acquired Palmoplantar Keratoderma

American Journal of Clinical Dermatology, 2007
Palmoplantar keratodermas (PPKs) are a diverse entity of disorders that are characterized by abnormal thickening of the skin on the palms and soles. Traditionally they have been classified as either hereditary or acquired and are distinguished from each other on the basis of mode of inheritance, presence of transgrediens (defined as contiguous ...
Shaily, Patel   +2 more
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Idiopathic Palmoplantar Hidradenitis

The American Journal of Dermatopathology, 1996
Idiopathic plantar hidradenitis (IPH) is a recently described condition primarily affecting healthy children who develop tender lesions localized to the plantar or lateral aspects of the feet with histologic findings similar to those seen in neutrophilic eccrine hidradenitis (NEH), although with certain notable exceptions including the absence of ...
G F, Buezo   +4 more
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Palmoplantar Reactions

Dermatology, 1994
The palmoplantar skin reacts monotonously to acute causes with vesicles or pustules and to chronic or chronically recurrent noxae with hyperkeratosis. Vesicular reactions are mostly triggered by eczematogens and fungi. Among the primary pustuloses, pustular psoriasis of the palms and soles is the dominating one, while the secondary pustuloses stem from
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