Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Endemic pemphigus foliaceus includes fogo selvagem, the new variant of endemic pemphigus foliaceus in El Bagre, Colombia, and the Tunisian endemic pemphigus in North Africa. [ 11 ] Hailey-Hailey disease , also called familial benign pemphigus, is an inherited skin disease, not an autoimmune disease, so it is not considered part of the pemphigus ...
Pemphigus betae Doane, 1900; Pemphigus birimatus; Pemphigus borealis Tullgren, 1909; Pemphigus brevicornis (Hart, 1894) Pemphigus burrowi Sanborn, 1904; Pemphigus bursarius (Linnaeus, 1758) Pemphigus bursifex Heer, 1853; Pemphigus circellatus Zhang, Guangxue & Tiesen Zhong, 1985; Pemphigus coluteae Passerini, 1863; Pemphigus cylindricus Zhang ...
Pemphigus vulgaris is a rare chronic blistering skin disease and the most common form of pemphigus.Pemphigus was derived from the Greek word pemphix, meaning blister. [1] It is classified as a type II hypersensitivity reaction in which antibodies are formed against desmosomes, components of the skin that function to keep certain layers of skin bound to each other.
Pemphigus erythematosus (Senear-Usher Syndrome) is a rare form of pemphigus with features of pemphigus foliaceus and lupus erythematosus. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] It was first described by Francis Senear and Barney Usher at the University of Illinois College of Medicine in 1926. [ 3 ]
Bullous pemphigoid (a type of pemphigoid) is an autoimmune pruritic skin disease that typically occurs in people aged over 60, that may involve the formation of blisters in the space between the epidermal and dermal skin layers.
Pemphigus spyrothecae is in the superfamily Aphidoidea, in the hymopterous division of the order Hemiptera, which consists of insects with sucking parts of the mouth. P. spyrothecae is a member of the suborder Sternorrhyncha, which includes scale insects, psyllids, whiteflies, aphids.
Pemphigus betae, also known as the sugarbeet root aphid, is a species of gall-forming aphid that forms galls specifically on the commonly found narrowleaf cottonwood (aka the willow-leaved poplar tree), Populus angustifolia. Sugarbeet root aphids have been found in North America and Europe. [2]
This page was last edited on 21 January 2017, at 10:13 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.