Results 191 to 200 of about 19,095 (230)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1973
Recent outbreaks of scabies have created a worldwide increase in the incidence of this disorder. The diagnosis is often overlooked in infants and children because of a low index of suspicion on the part of clinicians, a frequent lack of pathognomonic burrows, secondary eczematous changes suggesting other diagnoses, and an atypical distribution to ...
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Recent outbreaks of scabies have created a worldwide increase in the incidence of this disorder. The diagnosis is often overlooked in infants and children because of a low index of suspicion on the part of clinicians, a frequent lack of pathognomonic burrows, secondary eczematous changes suggesting other diagnoses, and an atypical distribution to ...
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JDDG: Journal der Deutschen Dermatologischen Gesellschaft, 2007
Cord, Sunderkötter +5 more
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Cord, Sunderkötter +5 more
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Journal of Special Operations Medicine, 2019
Elena M, Crecelius, Mark W, Burnett
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Elena M, Crecelius, Mark W, Burnett
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American Journal of Infection Control, 1987
H H, Meester, S T, Go, D B, Bruynzeel
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H H, Meester, S T, Go, D B, Bruynzeel
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Drug and Therapeutics Bulletin, 2002
Each month in the UK, typically, around 100 cases of scabies are reported per 100,000 people in general practice.1 Here we discuss how to recognise and treat this often debilitating parasitic skin infestation.
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Each month in the UK, typically, around 100 cases of scabies are reported per 100,000 people in general practice.1 Here we discuss how to recognise and treat this often debilitating parasitic skin infestation.
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Archives of Dermatology, 1979
To the Editor.— In the AugustArchives, Dr A. Paul Kelly reports that he has never, in his clinic with an attendance of more than 60% blacks, seen a single documented case of scabies in his black patients (114:1245, 1978). He requests information from all physicians with documented cases of scabies in black patients. To me, this request is astonishing.
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To the Editor.— In the AugustArchives, Dr A. Paul Kelly reports that he has never, in his clinic with an attendance of more than 60% blacks, seen a single documented case of scabies in his black patients (114:1245, 1978). He requests information from all physicians with documented cases of scabies in black patients. To me, this request is astonishing.
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DMW - Deutsche Medizinische Wochenschrift, 1967
W P, Herrmann, G K, Steigleder
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W P, Herrmann, G K, Steigleder
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Scabies: Diagnostic and Therapeutic Update
Journal of Cutaneous Medicine and Surgery, 2021Robert N Richards
exaly

