Zobrazeno 1 - 6
of 6
pro vyhledávání: '"Charles Tring"'
Autor:
Charles Tring, Lyndon B. Murgatroyd
Publikováno v:
Dermatology. 153:357-362
Skin surface biopsies taken from normal and parakeratotic skin and stained with a 4-4-diamidinodiphenylamine dihydrochloride (M & B 938) were examined microscopically using bright field and ultraviolet light illumination. No fluorescence was seen in
Autor:
A. Pasmanik, Edward Rudzki, Lyndon B. Murgatroyd, Zdzislaw Zakrzewski, Sayed Zaki Salem, Grażyna Prokopczyk, R. Schuppli, Harukuni Urabe, Eleasar J. Feuerman, H. Niggli, K. Hoffmann, R.S. Manor, Anna Kozlowska, B.K. Fisher, H. Seiler, Takako Higuchi, Teruo Miyagawa, S. Shalit, Miriam Schewach-Millet, Wagih K. Bayoomy, Hassan Abd El-Aal, Charles Tring, I. Dvoretzky, Atsuhiko Ogino, Abd El-Wahed Boseila, Z. Harari
Publikováno v:
Dermatology. 153:I-V
Autor:
F. Charles Tring
Publikováno v:
The Journal of Dermatologic Surgery and Oncology. 2:403-405
The surface microtopography of normal human skin varies from one anatomical region to another. The patterns at different sites are considered to reflect different orientations of dermal fibers. A simple technique is described that enables such orient
Autor:
F. Charles Tring, Ronald E. Church
Publikováno v:
Archives of Dermatology. 113:687
To the Editor.— Toxic epidermal necrolysis is recognized with increasing frequency in association with an enlarging variety of other diseases and is apparently precipitated by a very wide spectrum of triggering mechanisms. Rarer but important assoc
Autor:
F. Charles Tring, Lyndon B. Murgatroyd
Publikováno v:
Archives of Dermatology. 111:476
Easily prepared adhesive slides have been used to obtain surface-layer biopsy specimens from psoriasis and other scaly dermatoses that occur on the limbs. Psoriasis obliterates the normal skin pattern, but the change is not specific. However, as psor
Autor:
F. Charles Tring, Lyndon B. Murgatroyd
Publikováno v:
Archives of Dermatology. 109:223
Very easily prepared adhesive slides have been used to obtain surface layer biopsy specimens from different anatomical sites. Cutaneous patterns are composed of very fine lines intersecting to form consistent geometric characters. Particular anatomic