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Outside back cover : "Master the nuances of dermatologic diagnosis, Washington anual style! The Washington Manual family of references are universally respected as focused, user-friendly, clinically relevant handbooks that provide essential, “in-the-trenches” know how for physicians of all experience levels. The Washington Manual of Dermatology Diagnostics carries on this tradition, equipping you to efficiently evaluate the complete spectrum of skin disorders so you can manage them appropriately. Accurately diagnose a full range of skin diseases and disorders, from inflammatory conditions through infections and infestations, reactive disorders and drug eruptions, disorders of pigmentation, benign and malignant lesions, and disorders of the hair and nails, to cutaneous manifestations of systemic disease. Master dermatologic surgery techniques including biopsies, electrosurgery, cryotherapy, photodynamic therapy, Mohs micrographic surgery, laser surgery, and wound healing. Effectively assess pediatric and geriatric conditions with complete, separate chapters on these important areas. Find the information you need quickly thanks to a compact, quick-reference format. Approach clinical challenges from any direction with appendices that organize differential diagnoses by primary lesion, morphological groups, and anatomical region, as well as pediatric differential diagnoses."
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The thoroughly updated 3rd Edition of this highly regarded text continues to provide the latest therapeutic and surgical information on nail disease. A new signs-oriented section guides you to disease-specific information and simplifies diagnosis. The new, streamlined format includes bullet lists cross-references "Therapy" and Key points" highlights for easy reference and full-color artwork throughout, as well as a larger page size that accommodates bigger photographs. In addition, many illustrations have been added to elucidate complex basic science. Provides the most reliable and comprehensive treatment information available--fully revised to include the latest therapeutic and surgical knowledge. Uses a disease-oriented chapter format.
Skin Diseases --- Integumentary System --- Nail Diseases --- Nails --- Anatomy --- Skin and Connective Tissue Diseases --- Diseases
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Human cell culture. --- Tissue culture. --- Tissus --- Culture --- INTEGUMENTARY SYSTEM --- CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEM --- RESPIRATORY SYSTEM --- HUMANS --- CELL CULTURE --- CELL BIOLOGY --- METHODS
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Dermatopathology: The Basics will serve as an effective and efficient handbook for the student of dermatopathology, and as a practical bench reference for the practicing diagnostician who desires rapid access to criteria that are useful in differentiating histologically similar entities. The chapters consist of essential bullet points arranged in organized outlines allowing for easy access and direct comparison between entities. The elaborate pictorial documentation will also enable the book to serve as an atlas of the most common dermatologic disorders. .
Skin -- Cancer. --- Skin -- Diseases. --- Integumentary System --- Skin and Connective Tissue Diseases --- Anatomy --- Diseases --- Skin --- Skin Diseases --- Medicine --- Health & Biological Sciences --- Dermatology --- Pathology --- Dermatology. --- Pathology. --- Disease (Pathology) --- Medicine. --- Medicine & Public Health. --- Medical sciences --- Medicine, Preventive
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The skin, the body’s largest organ, is strategically located at the interface with the external environment where it detects, integrates and responds to a diverse range of stressors, including solar radiation. It has already been established that the skin is an important peripheral neuroendocrine-immune organ that is closely networked with central regulatory systems. These capabilities contribute to the maintenance of peripheral homeostasis. Specifically, epidermal and dermal cells produce and respond to classical stress neurotransmitters, neuropeptides and hormones, production which is stimulated by ultraviolet radiation (UVR), biological factors (infectious and non-infectious) and other physical and chemical agents. Examples of local biologically active products are cytokines, biogenic amines (catecholamines, histamine, serotonin and N-acetyl-serotonin), melatonin, acetylocholine, neuropeptides including pituitary (proopiomelanocortin-derived ACTH, b-endorphin or MSH peptides, thyroid stimulating hormone) and hypothalamic (corticotropin-releasing factor and related urocortins, thyroid-releasing hormone) hormones, as well as enkephalins and dynorphins, thyroid hormones, steroids (glucocorticoids, mineralocorticoids, sex hormones, 7-δ steroids), secosteroids, opioids and endocannabinoids. The production of these molecules is hierarchical, organized along the algorithms of classical neuroendocrine axes such as the hypothalamic pituitary adrenal axis (HPA), hypothalamic-thyroid axis (HPT), serotoninergic, melatoninergic, catecholaminergic, cholinergic, steroid/secosteroidogenic, opioid and endocannabinoid systems. Disruptions of these axes or of communication between them may lead to skin and/or systemic diseases. These local neuroendocrine networks also serve to limit the effect of noxious environmental agents to preserve local and consequently global homeostasis. Moreover, the skin-derived factors/systems can also activate cutaneous nerve endings to alert the brain to changes in the epidermal or dermal environments, or alternatively to activate other coordinating centers by direct (spinal cord) neurotransmission without brain involvement. Furthermore, rapid and reciprocal communications between epidermal and dermal and adnexal compartments are also mediated by neurotransmission including antidromic modes of conduction. Lastly, skin cells and the skin as an organ coordinate and/or regulate not only peripheral but also global homeostasis. .
Neuroendocrinology. --- Skin -- Innervation. --- Skin -- Physiology. --- Integumentary System Physiological Phenomena --- Physiological Processes --- Nervous System --- Endocrine System --- Anatomy --- Phenomena and Processes --- Physiological Phenomena --- Neurosecretory Systems --- Homeostasis --- Skin Physiological Phenomena --- Medicine --- Health & Biological Sciences --- Neurology --- Dermatology --- Skin --- Physiology. --- Medicine. --- Neurosciences. --- Dermatology. --- Biomedicine. --- Neural sciences --- Neurological sciences --- Neuroscience --- Medical sciences --- Nervous system --- Diseases
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Containing a wealth of updated basic information and high quality of iconographic material, Dermatopathology can assist the microscopists in a practical way to approach and solve the diagnostic problems they may face in the field. At a time when esoteric clinical entities and analytic techniques come and go, there is a need for a solid, updated, down to earth and "bench oriented" text in the field of dermopathology. This text provides a handbook which may be more helpful than an encyclopedic, "board oriented" textbook. The senior author of this book has been successfully working for over thirty years in his capacity as director of a private dermatopathology laboratory. His experience and knowledge of the subject is reflected in this well-structured and clearly-written text.
Medicine. --- Skin -- Cancer. --- Skin -- Diseases. --- Skin --- Cutaneous manifestations of general diseases --- Dermatology --- Integumentary System --- Skin and Connective Tissue Diseases --- Diseases --- Anatomy --- Skin Diseases --- Medicine --- Health & Biological Sciences --- Pathophysiology --- Diseases. --- Cancer. --- Cutaneous diseases --- Dermatoses --- Dermatology. --- Pathology. --- Medicine & Public Health. --- Disease (Pathology) --- Medical sciences --- Medicine, Preventive
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Anatomy --- Anatomy. --- Anatomie --- Animal anatomy --- Animals --- Anatomies --- Biology --- Physiology --- anatomy and morphology. --- morphology and anatomy --- Biological Sciences --- animal anatomy --- animal morphology --- body regions --- embryonic structures --- fungal anatomy --- fungal morphology --- haustoria --- integumentary system --- morphs --- peristome --- plant anatomy --- plant morphology --- polymorphism --- reproductive system --- salt glands --- thallus --- tissues --- viral morphology --- histology --- Anatomie. --- anatomy.
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Why This Volume? The title of this volume reads like an oxymoron.After all, it is well known that,whether animal or human,adults do not spontaneously regenerate any of their organs that have been lost to accidental trauma or to surgery. If mammals could somehow regenerate organs such as the skin of a hand lost to a burn or a breast lost to mastectomy, scars should not ?ll the anato- cal site of the lost organ; instead,a regrown organ should emerge.If reg- eration were possible, treatments might also be developed for potentially lethal degenerative conditions such as a scarred heart muscle or a cirrhotic liver. The concept of induced organ regeneration in adults is relatively new. The deliberate modi?cation of healing to achieve regrowth of lost tissue structures does not follow directly from current mainstream paradigms of biological research.The ?rst tentative recognition that the healing process could be modi?ed to induce regeneration of the dermis, a tissue that does not spontaneously regenerate in adults, appeared in reports published in the early 1980s. Eventually, other organs, including peripheral nerves and the eye conjunctiva, were induced to regenerate in anatomical wounds known to be incapable of supporting spontaneous regeneration. The data on induced regeneration are scattered in a variety of journals, book chapters,abstracts,and theses.It is time to marshal the extensive e- dence.This is the main reason for writing this volume.
Nerves --- Regeneration (Biology). --- Skin --- Regeneration. --- Nerves -- Regeneration. --- Skin -- Regeneration. --- Integumentary System Physiological Phenomena --- Nerve Regeneration --- Skin Physiological Phenomena --- Peripheral Nerves --- Regeneration (Biology) --- Medicine. --- Molecular biology. --- Dermatology. --- Neurology. --- Medicine & Public Health. --- Medicine/Public Health, general. --- Molecular Medicine. --- Neurology . --- Molecular biochemistry --- Molecular biophysics --- Biochemistry --- Biophysics --- Biomolecules --- Systems biology --- Medicine --- Nervous system --- Neuropsychiatry --- Health Workforce --- Diseases
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Skin Diseases --- Integumentary System --- Nail Diseases --- Nails --- Anatomy --- Skin and Connective Tissue Diseases --- Diseases --- Medicine --- Dermatology --- Health & Biological Sciences --- Anatomies --- Fingernails --- Toenails --- Fingernail --- Nail --- Toenail --- Disease, Nail --- Diseases, Nail --- Nail Disease --- Integumentary Systems --- System, Integumentary --- Systems, Integumentary --- Dermatosis --- Dermatoses --- Skin and Subcutaneous Tissue Disorders --- Skin Disease
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Human hair is the subject of a remarkably wide range of scientific investigations. Its chemical and physical properties are of importance to the cosmetics industry, forensic scientists and to biomedical researchers. The fifth edition of this book confirms its position as the definitive monograph on the subject. Previous editions were recognized as “concise and thorough” (Journal of the American Chemical Society), “an invaluable resource” (Canadian Forensic Science Society Journal), and “highly recommended” (Textile Research Journal). Chemical and Physical Behavior of Human Hair is a teaching guide and reference volume for cosmetic chemists and other scientists in the hair products industry, academic researchers studying hair and hair growth, textile scientists and forensic specialists. Features of the Fifth Edition: •Recent advances in the classification and characterization of the different proteins and genes in IF and keratin associated proteins in human hair are described. •The mechanism and incidence of hair growth and loss and hair density vs. age of males & females are described for Asians, Caucasians and Africans in different scalp regions. •Details of hair surface lipids and cuticle membranes provide a better understanding of the surface and organization of the CMC and its involvement in stress strain is presented. •Recent evidence demonstrates a more bilateral structure in curly hair and a more concentric arrangement of different cortical proteins in straighter hair. •SNPs involved in hair form (curl and coarseness) and pigmentation and genes in alopecia and hair abnormalities are described. •The latest biosynthetic scheme for hair pigments and structures for these and the different response of red versus brown-black pigments to photodegradation is described. •A new method for curvature on 2,400 persons from different countries and groups is used to assign curvature throughout this book. •Additional data for age and effects on diameter, ellipticity, elastic modulus, break stress and other parameters are presented with much larger data sets featuring statistical analyses. •Hair conditioning, strength, breakage, split ends, flyaway, shine, combing ease, body, style retention, manageability and feel parameters are defined and described. •A new section of different life stages by age groups considering collective and individual changes in hair fiber properties with age and how these affect assembly properties.
Hair. --- Hair -- chemistry. --- Hair -- physiology. --- Integumentary System --- Anatomy --- Hair --- Medicine --- Health & Biological Sciences --- Dermatology --- Animal Fur --- Fetal Hair --- Hair, Fetal --- Lanugo --- Fetal Hairs --- Fur, Animal --- Hairs --- Hairs, Fetal --- Anatomies --- Integumentary Systems --- System, Integumentary --- Systems, Integumentary --- Medicine. --- Dermatology. --- Forensic medicine. --- Medicine & Public Health. --- Biomedicine general. --- Forensic Medicine. --- Forensic medicine --- Injuries (Law) --- Jurisprudence, Medical --- Legal medicine --- Forensic sciences --- Medical laws and legislation --- Skin --- Clinical sciences --- Medical profession --- Human biology --- Life sciences --- Medical sciences --- Pathology --- Physicians --- Diseases --- Health Workforce --- Biomedicine, general. --- Medical jurisprudence.
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