,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
  • Forum
———Top menu
Login
 

GLOBALE DERMATOLOGIE

Globale DermatologieGlobale Dermatologie
Globale Dermatologie
Portail d'information sur la dermatologie

GLOBALE DERMATOLOGIE

  • Home
  • About
  • General informations
  • For professionnels
  • Posts in other languages
    • Allemand (Deutsch)
    • arabe (العربية)
    • chinois (中文)
    • espagnol (Español)
    • italien (Italiano)
    • japonais (日本語)
    • portugais (Português)
    • russe (русский язык)
    • tagalog
  • Find a dermatologist
  • Register
  • Contact
Menu back  
  • Home
  • About
  • General informations
  • For professionnels
  • Posts in other languages
    • back
    • Allemand (Deutsch)
    • arabe (العربية)
    • chinois (中文)
    • espagnol (Español)
    • italien (Italiano)
    • japonais (日本語)
    • portugais (Português)
    • russe (русский язык)
    • tagalog
  • Find a dermatologist
  • Register
  • Contact
 

Yearly Archives: 2014

You are here:
  1. Home
  2. 2014
  3. (Page 5)

Nevus spilus: why use such a term ?

Terminology Nevus comes from Latin and translated to: patch present at birth The Greek word of origin: σπιλος = spilos = dirt Translated together it means: dirty nevus Definition It is often understood that nevus spilus is a melanocytic nevus within another melanocytics nevus , or better melanocytic nevi inside another one. Nevus spilus is…

Thursday November 6th, 2014Histoire & TerminologieBy ofredon@oxicat.com

Dermatologie dans les maladies systémiques – Table des matières

  • Iron Deficiency Anemia (Anaemia) And The Skin
  • Skin lesions in Crohn’s disease (2)
  • Dermatomyositis
  • Mesothelioma and the Skin
  • Metabolic Syndrome and the Skin
  • Skin Manifestations of Mixed Connective Tissue Disease (MCTD)
  • Photosensitivity
  • Morphea (Localized Scleroderma)
Wednesday November 5th, 2014Dermatologie dans les maladies systémiquesBy ofredon@oxicat.com

Quincke's Oedema (Angiedema): who was Quincke ?

Although not used frequently in English, *Quincke’s edema refers to a German physician and surgeon. His name was Dr Heinrich Iränus Quincke. He was born in Frankfurt in 1842 and died there in 1922. He was a subordinate physician (Assistentarzt) at the age of 28 and became chair of the department of internal medicine at…

Tuesday November 4th, 2014Leave a commentHistoire & TerminologieBy ofredon@oxicat.com

Goltz-Gorlin syndrome: Is it one or 2 syndromes ?

What syndrome is it and who is the author ? The authors are two physicians with the same first name. Dr Robert Gorlin (1923-2006) was initially a dentist and was interested in oral diseases. He joined the Minnesota school of dentistry as a stomatologist (histology and oral pathology). When he observed a female patient with…

Tuesday November 4th, 2014Histoire & TerminologieBy ofredon@oxicat.com

Leukotrichia: what the word means

This term comes from 2 Greek words : λευκóς= leukos = white θρίξ = trix = hair The term is less and less used nowadays. It is not found in recent  dermatological textbooks. Leukotrichia means having white hair. Nevertheless, it does NOT give any precision whether this white hair is pathological or normal (a sign…

Tuesday November 4th, 2014Histoire & TerminologieBy ofredon@oxicat.com

Donovanosis – the other name for Granuloma Inguinale

In the ancient classification (now obsolete), donovanosis was listed as the 5th venereal disease. In dermatology textbooks, it is known as Granuloma Inguinale ou venereal granuloma. As this infection is quite rare in Western Europe and that names are quite similar, medical students tend to find it difficult to make the difference with  lymphogranuloma venereum…

Tuesday November 4th, 2014Histoire & TerminologieBy ofredon@oxicat.com

Favus: a fungal affection which disappeared ?

The term comes originally from Latin: Favus = honeycomb When one looks at a famous picture in Dr Hebra’s textbook, one understands the comparison of the term with ease. The fungus causing the affection is called Trichophyton schönleinii, which refers to Dr Johann Lucas Schönlein (1793-1864) who worked at la Charité hospital in Berlin, Germany.…

Monday November 3rd, 2014Histoire & TerminologieBy ofredon@oxicat.com

Pretibial Myxedema / Pretibial Mucinosis: where do the words come from ?

The Greek and Latin words of origin are: μυξοσ = muxos = mucosité – latin : mucos οιδεμα = oidema = swelling The first term in Greek is not universally used anymore. The latin translation of the Greek word is “mucos”. The terms translated into Latin from Greek are sometimes confusing: it is probably the…

Monday November 3rd, 2014Histoire & TerminologieBy ofredon@oxicat.com

Keratosis follicularis: who was Darier ?

Dr Ferdinand Jean Darier (1856-1938) was born in Budapest, Hungary. He studied medicine in Geneva, Switzerland and Paris. He worked with Drs Ernest Besnier et Alfred Fournier and sub-specialized in dermatopathology. Darier is considered as the father of modern dermatology in France and wrote a dermatology textbook  “Précis de Dermatologie” (edited 4 times). He also…

Monday November 3rd, 2014Histoire & TerminologieBy ofredon@oxicat.com

Bubo (inflammed lymph node): remembering the plague

The term comes from Greek: βoυβớν = boubon = swelling of the inguinal glande In other words it is an adenopathy of inguinal lymph mode – also called bubon. Today the term is less and less used probably because Hippocrates (of Kos) described it for thé plague, which was prevalent in Ancient Times. The bubo…

Monday November 3rd, 2014Histoire & TerminologieBy ofredon@oxicat.com
1
2
…34567…
89101112131415161718
19
Prev pageNext page
© Globale Dermatologie 2015 - Tous droits réservés