31,955 research outputs found

    Werfel, Thomas

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    Atopic dermatitis – Perspectives and unmet medical needs

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    Atopic dermatitis (AD) is a chronic inflammatory skin disease for which many new insights have been gained in recent years through a better understanding of pathophysiology, concomitant diseases and therapeutics in particular. In this review, new and practice‐relevant results from current research are presented. Many studies have been performed on the diagnosis of AD and on different subtypes, yet no diagnostic biomarker or clinical predictor of treatment response has been established. For topical treatment, some agents such as Janus kinase (JAK) inhibitors are in advanced stages of clinical trials or already approved in some countries, which will be available in Europe for the treatment of certain eczema subtypes in the foreseeable future. Current systemic therapies in Europe include two antibodies for inhibition of the interleukin (IL)‐4/13 signaling cascades and three oral JAK inhibitors with somewhat different efficacy and safety profiles. Among the antibody therapies for AD already advanced in development, promising new targets include blockade of IL‐31, of neurokinin‐1 receptor on sensory neurons, and inhibition of the OX40/OX40L axis for cutaneous dendritic cell and T lymphocyte interaction. Primary prevention and modulation of sequential disease progression as well as effects on concomitant diseases by early therapeutic intervention will be important questions in future research on AD

    Franz Werfel

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    Voß T. Franz Werfel. In: Pittrof T, ed. Handbuch des literarischen Katholizismus im deutschsprachigen Raum des 20. Jahrhunderts. Berlin/New York: Walter de Gruyter; 2013

    data analysis 2009–2018

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    BACKGROUND Allergic contact dermatitis caused by shoes is common and new relevant allergens have been identified. OBJECTIVES To investigate the pattern of type IV sensitization in patients with suspected allergic contact dermatitis of the feet related to shoes as a presumed culprit trigger. METHODS Retrospective analysis of data of the Information Network of Departments of Dermatology (IVDK), 2009-2018. RESULTS Six hundred twenty-five patients with presumed shoe dermatitis were identified in a cohort of 119 417 patients. Compared to patients with suspected contact sensitization from other allergen sources (n = 118 792), study group patients were more frequently sensitized to potassium dichromate (10.8% vs 3.5%), colophony (7.2% vs 3.7%), mercaptobenzothiazole (MBT; 4.0% vs 0.6%), mercapto mix (4.6% vs 0.6%), and p-tert-butylphenol formaldehyde resin (1.6% vs 0.5%). Sensitizations to urea formaldehyde resin, melamine formaldehyde resin, glutaraldehyde, tricresyl phosphate, and phenyl glycidylether were rare. Moreover, reactions to compounds in the leather or textile dyes test series were scarce. CONCLUSION A distinct sensitization pattern was observed in patients with suspected allergy to shoe materials. Although substances with low sensitization rates should be removed from the leather and shoe patch test series, novel potential allergens should be added

    Thomas Grisell letter to Thomas Rotch, 2nd mo 19th 1823

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    Thomas Grisell's letter reached the Rotch household several months before the unexpected death of Thomas Rotch in August, 1823. This is the last letter of the series and presumably the author learned of his friend's death before another letter was penned. 7.95" x 10" (20.2 by 25.5 cm

    Failed Censures: Ecclesiastical Regulation of Women’s Clothing in Late Medieval Italy

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    Churchmen in the late thirteenth and early fourteenth centuries tried to regulate the costume of Italian women. These efforts failed, and regulation was largely left thereafter to civic authorities.The published version was published as Chapter 3 in Medieval Clothing and Textiles 5Izbicki, Thomas M. (2009), "Failed Censures: Ecclesiastical Regulation of Women’s Clothing in Late Medieval Italy" in Netherton, Robin and Owen-Crocker, Gale R., eds., Medieval Clothing and Textiles 5 (Boydell Press), 37-53ISBN: 9781843834519 (published book)Peer reviewe

    Western medieval legal manuscripts in the collections of the University of Pennsylvania

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    Western legal manuscripts of the Middle Ages in North American collections are among the least known to scholars. The University of Pennsylvania has a rich collection of these texts, several of which were in the collection of the historian Henry Charles Lea. Included are works of civil law and canon law, as well as collections of papal letters and guides to pastoral care. The descriptions of most of these manuscripts in the catalog of Norman P. Zacour and Rudolf Hirsch are perfunctory, sometimes erring or omitting valuable information. Other manuscripts were added in recent years in the Lawrence J. Schoenberg Collection. Much of this material is being added to the Franklin online catalog of the University’s libraries, but researchers frequently do not search these digital resources. This article provides more complete guidance to the University’s medieval legal manuscripts than any of the existing catalogs offers, whether in print or online. It also provides updated bibliographic information in print or online. Every manuscript has been examined by the author in situ. Among the important works represented in the collection is the Panormia (a work of canon law often attributed to Ivo of Chartres). Authors present include the curialist Thomas of Capua, canonists Petrus de Braco, William of Pagula, Bernardus Raimundi, Adam of Aldersbach, Raymond of Peñafort, and civil lawyers Baldus de Ubaldis, and Bartolus de Saxoferrato. Three of these manuscripts were owned in the past by Sir Thomas Phillipps
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