Results 251 to 260 of about 37,419 (303)
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Multiple Sweat Gland Abscesses

JAMA, 1960
Multiple sweat gland abscesses are a distinctive primary pyoderma of the eccrine sweat gland apparatus, usually affecting infants. The hallmark of this condition is one to many dome-shaped, cold, nontender abscesses that have neither a central core nor a tendency to point.
H I, MAIBACH, A M, KLIGMAN
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Immunohistochemical sweat gland profiles

Journal of Cosmetic Dermatology, 2013
SummaryBackgroundHuman sweat glands are heterogeneous in their structures and functions. Accordingly, eccrine, apocrine, and apoeccrine glands are distinguished.AimsSome immunohistochemical markers are expected to distinguish the sweat gland types in their secretory and excretory parts.MethodsThis study used two sets of antibodies.
Noël, Fanchon   +5 more
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Sweat Gland Tumor Microenvironment

2020
Malignant sweat gland tumors are rare cutaneous neoplasms and associated with poor prognosis. The process of tumorigenesis originating from sweat glands is complex and dynamic. The tumor is surrounded by an extracellular matrix (ECM) and stromal cells, as well as physiological state from the tumor microenvironment (TME).
Adeodatus, Yuda Handaya   +3 more
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Malignant Sweat Gland Tumors

Hematology/Oncology Clinics of North America, 2019
Malignant sweat gland neoplasms are a confusing area within dermatopathology, with many entities reported under several designations in the literature. This review describes the key clinical and histopathologic features of select malignant adnexal neoplasms, including porocarcinoma, papillary carcinoma, adenoid cystic carcinoma, cribriform carcinoma ...
Christine S, Ahn, Omar P, Sangüeza
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Sweat Gland Tumors

Archives of Dermatology, 1964
A study of syringoma and eccrine poroma by methods which detect phosphorylase, leucine aminopeptidase, and indoxyl esterase revealed the functional relationship of the tumors to the eccrine gland. The term "adenoacanthoma of sweat glands" is not favored because these tumors are adenoid squamouscell carcinoma and do not contain the typical enzymatic ...
R K, WINKELMANN, S A, MULLER
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Immunohistochemical demonstration of ferritin in sweat gland and sweat gland neoplasms

Journal of Cutaneous Pathology, 1990
Using a rabbit anti‐human liver ferritin antibody, we examined the binding patterns of this reagent in normal skin and observed a unique binding pattern limited to the outermost layer of the eccrine duct. Examination of a variety of sweat gland neoplasms revealed 2 distinct patterns.
N S, Penneys, I, Zlatkiss
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The Eccrine Sweat Gland

Postgraduate Medicine, 1965
The clinical value of sweat electrolyte determinations is limited at present to the diagnosis of cystic fibrosis of the pancreas in children, but the function of the eccrine sweat gland in various systemic diseases has aroused considerable interest in recent years. Abnormalities of sweat electrolytes have been found in a number of systemic diseases. In
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Sweat gland carcinoma with metastases

Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, 1960
Sweat gland carcinomas with distant metastases have been infrequently recorded in the literature, the first case being reported by Hedinger 1 in 1911. Most of these tumors have originated in areas where the apocrine sweat glands are located. Primary tumors of the hand are also uncommon; of 750,827 patients seen at the Henry Ford Hospital and Clinics ...
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Anogenital “Sweat” Glands

The American Journal of Dermatopathology, 1991
A new variant of cutaneous glands is described that occurs in the anogenital region, with its highest concentration in the interlabial sulcus of the vulva. The glands are characterized by a wide coiled tube from which originate acini, diverticula, and short branches; a lining of a compact simple columnar epithelium with prominent cytoplasmic snouts ...
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The Sweat Glands

1975
The two major objectives of the function of the human sweat glands are: 1. To assist in the maintenance of body temperature through the evaporation of the sweat on the surface of the skin. 2. To aid in the maintenance of water, electrolyte, and nitrogen balance by excretion of excess water, electrolytes, and nitrogenous compounds.
Samuel Natelson, Ethan A. Natelson
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