Alopecia Areata
Mostrando 1-12 de 43 artigos, teses e dissertações.
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1. Qual abordagem para o paciente com queixa de alopecia?
Alopecia pode ser descrita como perda de cabelo em áreas onde normalmente eles deveriam crescer. A alopecia pode ser decorrente de influências genéticas, de processos inflamatórios locais ou de doenças sistêmicas. Alopecia é classificada como cicatricial ou não-cicatricial, dependendo se a perda de cabelo é permanente ou não, conforme a área do
Núcleo de Telessaúde Rio Grande do Sul. Publicado em: 12/06/2023
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2. Como avaliar pacientes com queixa de queda de cabelo difusa?
Na anamnese, deve-se questionar o uso de agressores externos que possam estar danificando o cabelo e fazendo com que os mesmos quebrem em seu comprimento (por exemplo, produtos químicos, uso excessivo de tinturas, alisamentos, uso de secador/chapinha, etc.) ou de possíveis agressões mecânicas (amarrar o cabelo frequentemente com tração excessiva).
Núcleo de Telessaúde Rio Grande do Sul. Publicado em: 12/06/2023
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3. Alopecia Universal após Tratamento com Sinvastatina e Ezetimiba: Impactos na Família
Resumo A alopecia areata (AA) é uma doença autoimune que se desenvolve no couro cabeludo ou em outras partes do corpo. A alopecia universal, que é uma forma rara de alopecia areata, é caracterizada pela perda de pelos que afeta todo o corpo. Nos dois pacientes apresentados, o tratamento com atorvastatina foi iniciado com o diagnóstico de hipercolesterol
Arquivos Brasileiros de Cardiologia. Publicado em: 2022
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4. Treatment of alopecia areata with Diphenylcyclopropenone: methodology based on the principles of allergic contact dermatitis
Anais Brasileiros de Dermatologia. Publicado em: 2022
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5. Alopecia areata: descriptive analysis in a Brazilian sample
Anais Brasileiros de Dermatologia. Publicado em: 2022
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6. Randomized controlled study comparing the use of diphencyprone and anthralin in the treatment of extensive chronic alopecia areata
Abstract Cutis rhomboidalis nuchae was assessed in a 65-year-old patient. Optical microscopy showed basophilic agglomerations in the reticular dermis with decreased elastic fibers. Trans- mission electron microscopy showed elongated, curved and fragmented structures, and in their interior the presence of electron-dense lumps was reduced and irregular, simila
An. Bras. Dermatol.. Publicado em: 2021-06
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7. CTLA4 +49AG (rs231775) and CT60 (rs3087243) gene variants are not associated with alopecia areata in a Mexican population from Monterrey Mexico,
Abstract Background: Alopecia areata is an autoimmune disease that produces non-scarring hair loss around the body. Gene variants of the cytotoxic T-lymphocyte antigen 4 (CTLA4) gene, a negative regulator of T-cell response, have been associated with a predisposition to autoimmune diseases in different populations; however, the involvement of these genetic
An. Bras. Dermatol.. Publicado em: 2020-06
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8. Intralesional betamethasone as a therapeutic option for alopecia areata
An. Bras. Dermatol.. Publicado em: 2018-03
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9. Coexistence of chronic cutaneous lupus erythematosus and frontal fibrosing alopecia
Abstract: Lupus erythemathosus is a chronic, relapsing disease with acute, subacute, and chronic lesions. Effluvium telogen occurs in the setting of systemic activity of the disease, and cicatricial alopecia results from discoid lesionsin on the scalp. Other types of alopecia, like alopecia areata, may rarely be found in lupus. Frontal fibrosing alopecia is
An. Bras. Dermatol.. Publicado em: 2018-03
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10. Yellow dots in trichoscopy: relevance, clinical significance and peculiarities
Abstract: Yellow dots are follicular ostium filled with keratin and/or sebum. Initially, they were exclusively associated with alopecia areata. Currently they have also been described in androgenetic alopecia, chronic cutaneous (discoid) lupus erythematosus, and dissecting cellulitis. Due to the growing importance of trichoscopy and its findings in the evalu
An. Bras. Dermatol.. Publicado em: 2017-10
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11. Trichotillomania: a case report with clinical and dermatoscopic differential diagnosis with alopecia areata
ABSTRACT Trichotillomania is a psychodermatologic disorder characterized by uncontrollable urge to pull one's own hair. Differential diagnoses include the most common forms of alopecia such as alopecia areata. It is usually associated with depression and obsessive-compulsive disorder. Trichotillomania treatment standardization is a gap in the medical literat
An. Bras. Dermatol.. Publicado em: 2017-02
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12. Late-onset alopecia areata: descriptive analysis of 30 cases
Abstract Alopecia areata is an autoimmune disease characterized by non-scaring hair loss. The onset in over 50-year-old patients is rare and has barely been studied. Cases of this disease have been retrospectively analyzed – according to clinical forms, extension, and associated diseases – to assess alopecia areata characteristics in a group of patients
An. Bras. Dermatol.. Publicado em: 2016-12