Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0016632 (Fox)
1,461 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Two overweight male patients developed acanthosis nigrican of the axillae. Seven to nine months later, the patients developed hidradenitis suppurativa deep within the areas of acanthosis nigricans. On examination of biopsy specimens, the hyperkeratosis of acanthosis nigricans was found to extend into the follicles. In previous reports, Fox-Fordyce disease and pityriasis rubra pilaris have preceded the onset of hidradenitis suppurativa.
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PMID:Hidradenitis suppurativa following acanthosis nigricans. Report of two cases. 95 34

A review of cutaneous reactions associated with oral contraceptives intended to help the practitioner is presented. The skin responses to gestagens depend upon the sensitivity of the patient, the nature of the gestagen, and the ratio of progestogen to estrogen. Reactions are classified according to their physiologic mechanisms: hormonal effects, immune response, altered porphyrin metabolism, and miscellaneous skin problems. Some of the reactions associated with pseudopregnancy include herpes gestationis, melasma, vaginal candidiasis, cholestatic jaundice, alopecia, and possibly hypertophic gingivitis, neurofibromatosis, and telangiectasia. Hormonal effects include acneform eruptions, diffuse hair loss, and decrease of sebum production. Adverse effects exerted via the immune system include: candidiasis, decreased delayed skin-test reactivity, increased viral infections, flare of lupus erthematosus, erythema nodosum, erythema multiforme, photodermatitis, and herpes gestationis. Altered porphyrin metabolism effects include induction of porphyria and of variegate porphyria. Beneficial effects of oral contraceptives include improvement of acne, lessening of premenstrual flaring of aphthous ulcers, and improvement of Fox-Fordyce disease with estrogenic preparations. There is an unclear association between seborrhea, epithelial inclusion cysts, and hidradenitis supporativa and contraceptive therapy.
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PMID:Desirable and undesirable cutaneous effects of oral contraceptives. 1222 28

Melasma, moniliasis, photosensitivity, alopecia, and bullous eruptions are the most frequently reported dermatological side-effects of oral contraceptives. Other conditions reported occasionally as resulting from or being aggravated by these drugs have been acne, hidradenitis suppurativa, seborrhea, and Fox-Fordyce disease. Very rarely erythema nodosum, purpura, lupus erythematosus, increase in number of moles, and hypertrophic gingivitis have been associated. Melasma occurs within months or after a year in most cases, and may pass off gradually after stopping the drug. A malnutrition factor has been suggested and vitamin-B used as therapy. Photosensitivity may be a factor in melasma or occur independently. A period of months is required for the development of moniliasis. Family planning centers with their large numbers of patients should be a help in solving these problems but other specialists are needed also.
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PMID:Oral contraceptive and dermatology. 1230 10

The infundibulum is the funnel-shaped, uppermost epithelial segment of the hair follicle. Thus, as the infundibulum represents a major interface zone of mammalian skin epithelium with the environment and harbors a rich residential microflora, it is not surprising that this area is endowed with a specialized immune system and innate immune defenses. Clinically, the infundibulum is quite important, as it becomes prominently involved in many skin diseases such as acne, infundibular folliculitis and cysts, hidradenitis suppurativa, keratosis pilaris, Fox-Fordyce disease, and a subtype of basal cell carcinoma. Nevertheless, the biology of the infundibulum is only poorly understood, and it remains largely unknown how exactly the infundibulum contributes to skin disease, and how it might be targeted effectively for treating important skin diseases. Several recent studies in mouse models have identified new potential infundibular markers, shed light upon infundibular development and homeostasis, identified infundibular epithelial stem cells, and have implicated the infundibulum in the pathogenesis of additional skin disorders. These recent insights encourage one to systematically re-visit the biology and pathology of the infundibulum, one of the most important, yet least-studied frontiers in mammalian epithelial physiology.
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PMID:Deciphering the functions of the hair follicle infundibulum in skin physiology and disease. 2524 89

A switch from cell-mediated to humoral immunity (helper T 1 [Th1] to helper T 2 [Th2] shift) during gestation plays a key role in placental immune tolerance. As a result, skin diseases that are Th2 mediated often worsen, whereas skin diseases that are Th1 mediated often improve during gestation. Also, due to fluctuations in glandular activity, skin diseases involving sebaceous and eccrine glands may flare, whereas those involving apocrine glands may improve during pregnancy. Despite these trends, inflammatory and glandular skin diseases do not always follow the predicted pattern, and courses are often diverse. We review the gestational course of inflammatory skin diseases, such as atopic dermatitis (atopic eruption of pregnancy), psoriasis, impetigo herpetiformis, urticaria, erythema annulare centrifugum, pityriasis rosea, sarcoidosis, Sweet syndrome, and erythema nodosum, as well as glandular skin diseases, including acne vulgaris, acne rosacea, perioral dermatitis, hidradenitis suppurativa, Fox-Fordyce disease, hyperhidrosis, and miliaria. For each of these diseases, we discuss the pathogenesis, clinical presentation, and management with special consideration for maternal and fetal safety.
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PMID:Inflammatory and glandular skin disease in pregnancy. 2726 71