Results 261 to 270 of about 239,747 (299)
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Skin Manifestations of Internal Malignancy
Postgraduate Medicine, 1967Skin may be invaded by metastases from nearly any internal malignancy. The entire skin surface should be carefully inspected when an internal malignancy is suspected. Skin changes common to many diseases including malignancy are considered, as well as syndromes or entities which occur often enough with internal malignancy to warrant consideration of ...
C E, Wheeler, D C, Abele, R A, Briggaman
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Skin manifestations of pentazocine abuse
Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology, 1980Seventeen patients who had cutaneous complications following pentazocine injections are presented. The mean age was 50 years; total daily pentazocine dose ranged from 60 to 2,400 mg; evidence of psychiatric illness was present in 94%, and previous drug or alcohol abuse was noted in 65%.
R F, Palestine +3 more
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Dwarfism with skin manifestations
The Journal of Pediatrics, 1963The syndrome of low birth weight (intrauterine) dwarfism embraces a variety of types, one of which is the Bloom dwarf in whom there is a rash following exposure to sunlight. Three dwarfs of the Bloom type are described, and evidence is presented to suggest a hereditary basis for the disorder.
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Skin manifestations of rheumatoid arthritis
Italian Journal of Dermatology and Venereology, 2018Rheumatoid arthritis is a chronic systemic disease that, in addition to articular involvement, may exhibit a variety of extraarticular manifestations. The skin is frequently involved mainly in the most severe forms of the disease. Rheumatoid nodules, accelerated rheumatoid nodulosis, rheumatoid nodulosis, Felty syndrome, rheumatoid vasculitis, pyoderma
Viviana, Lora +2 more
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Skin manifestations with Rotavirus infections
International Journal of Dermatology, 2006AbstractRotavirus infection is one the most frequent cause of diarrhea among infants and children. Although it is not associated to specific dermatologic clinical pictures, recently, different clinical manifestations have been reported in association with this infection.
Vito, Di Lernia, Cinzia, Ricci
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Skin Manifestations in Infants With AIDS
International Journal of Dermatology, 1987ABSTRACT: We have observed a peculiar skin manifestation that resembles cutis marmorata in three patients with AIDS and may be included among the several clinical aspects of AIDS in pediatric patients. One of the three patients died 4 month; after the diagnosis. In an another patient, the skin lesion is still present 2 years after appearance.
D, Torre +4 more
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Skin Manifestations of HIV Infection
Primary Care: Clinics in Office Practice, 1989The skin is quite commonly involved in patients with HIV infection and the resulting diseases may serve as presenting signs of AIDS or ARC. The most common infectious and non-infectious inflammatory disorders as well as common neoplasms that are seen in this patient population are reviewed and depicted in detail.
C J, Cockerell, A E, Friedman-Kien
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Skin Manifestations of Chronic Acidosis
Archives of Dermatology, 1958The literature contains a number of references to the skin changes in chronic renal disease. The opinions regarding the cause of these skin changes are varied. Fishberg 2 considers the typical dryness of the skin in the uremic patient as due not primarily to nitrogen retention but rather to a compensatory polyuria leading to dehydration of all tissues,
E G, OLMSTEAD, J H, LUNSETH
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Skin Manifestations of Internal Malignancy
Clinics in Geriatric Medicine, 2002This article concentrates on the major signs and syndromes that are associated with internal malignancies in the geriatric population. Included are cutaneous metastases, ectopic adrenocorticotropic hormone-producing syndromes, and disorders arising from APUD cell tumors. The major paraneoplastic disorders of dermatomyositis, generalized pruritus, Bazex'
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Skin Manifestations of Food Allergy
Pediatrics, 2003The pediatrician is faced with evaluating a panoply of skin rashes, a subset of which may be induced by food allergy. Acute urticaria is a common manifestation of an allergic skin response to food, but food is rarely a cause of chronic urticaria. Approximately one third of infants/children with moderate to severe atopic dermatitis have food allergy ...
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