1,721,206 research outputs found
Emergency Management of Purpura and vasculitis, Including Purpura Fulminans
Systemic vasculitides can frequently evolve into emergency
conditions and sometimes present a critical situation
from their onset. The latter occurs most frequently in PF,
whereas progress to a critical situation is observed in HSP,
WG, CSS, PAN, MPA, and KD. The management of such
patients may require the dermatologist because the correct
interpretation of cutaneous lesions, an integral part of the
clinical pattern, can provide substantial help in identifying
the nature and phase of the disease. Dermatological assistance
may be essential in the treatment of lesions largely
involving the skin
Utility and limits of noninvasive methods in dermatology
The approach to medical diagnosis has undergone profound changes in recent years owing to the advent of instrumental diagnosis, which has replaced traditional clinical methods based on the medical history and objective signs. Many medical and surgical specialties now use instruments that are able to provide a more accurate diagnosis via noninvasive methods. This has led to the birth of super-specialized sectors which, within each discipline, promote knowledge and research in the respective fields of interest.
Dermatology has probably been the last discipline to embrace instrumental diagnosis. Indeed, the advent of bioengineering caught many dermatologists off-guard, bewildered by the many proposals coming from the medical supply industry and distrustful of machines whose practical utility was not always clear. This distrust may have ancestral origins, ingrained in the very essence of dermatology, which is a typical morphological discipline based on clinical aspects appreciable through sensory perceptions. During their specialist training, dermatologists learn to observe, recognize and classify lesions in order to identify the stereotypes that provide them with the diagnosis. Convinced of their perceptive superiority over any machine, they have not felt the need to develop suitable instruments to aid their objective examination. This methodological approach has led many dermatologists to consider instruments completely useless or even as enemies to combat, in that they are dangerous rivals of clinical experience. This type of attitude is obviously erroneous: although it is true that instrumental methods cannot replace the experience, sensitivity and intuition of the clinician, it is also true that they can be a valid complement to clinical methodology.
In fact, this prejudice has been disappearing for some years now and, additionally, dermatology has begun to employ instrumental semeiotics. Increasingly sophisticated machines that are able to explore the skin in a noninvasive manner can now provide biophysical measurements of the integumentary apparatus; these measurements can be considered parametric data of analogically appreciable signs. This has given rise to bioengineering of the skin, which in just a few years has led to the constitution of an autonomous and expanding sector.
The purpose of this editorial is to provide a panorama of noninvasive diagnostic methods in dermatology in an attempt to identify the instruments that are truly useful in current clinical practice, those whose use is important in specialized sectors, such as dermopharmacology and dermocosmetology, and those that have only experimental relevanc
Topically Applied Lycopene and Antioxidant Capacity
Various antioxidant substances have a protective effect on the skin when applied in suitable formulations. Natural lycopene (extracted from tomato), incorporated in an oil/water emulsion at a concentration of 0.03% and applied to the skin 30 min before ultraviolet exposure, decreased the erythema induced by UV radiation. Lycopene was more effective when associated with a-tocopherol palmitate and ascorbic acid, at concentrations of 0.5% and 1%, respectively. Since lycopene does not screen UV radiation, its protective ability is due to antioxidant activity. The potentiation of its effectiveness by vitamins E and C can probably be attributed to an interaction between the three substances in the cascade of events leading to the antiradical effect. As proposed for b-carotene, lycopene may act by repairing the tocopherol radical, after which it is repaired by the ascorbic acid. The efficiency of the system could be related to the different affinities (lipophilic or hydrophilic) of the components of this triple association. Because of its characteristics, lycopene is particularly suitable for topical application in sunscreens or in any preparation designed to prevent or reduce the harmful effects of oxidative stimuli
- …
