enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Chilblain lupus erythematosus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chilblain_lupus_erythematosus

    Chilblain lupus erythematosus is characterized by a rash that primarily affects acral surfaces that are frequently exposed to cold temperatures, such as the toes, fingers, ears, and nose. The rash is defined by oedematous skin, nodules, and tender plaques with a purple discoloration. [3]

  3. Lupus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lupus

    The modern period, beginning in 1920, saw major developments in research into the cause and treatment of discoid and systemic lupus. Research conducted in the 1920s and 1930s led to the first detailed pathologic descriptions of lupus and demonstrated how the disease affected the kidney, heart, and lung tissue. [ 165 ]

  4. Great Plains wolf - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Plains_Wolf

    The Great Plains wolf (Canis lupus nubilus), also known as the buffalo wolf or loafer, is a subspecies of gray wolf that once extended throughout the Great Plains, from southern Manitoba and Saskatchewan in Canada southward to northern Texas in the United States. [4]

  5. Mexican wolf - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mexican_wolf

    The Mexican wolf (Canis lupus baileyi), also known as the lobo mexicano (or, simply, lobo) [a] is a subspecies of gray wolf (C. lupus) native to eastern and southeastern Arizona and western and southern New Mexico (in the United States) and fragmented areas of northern Mexico.

  6. Lupus vulgaris - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lupus_vulgaris

    The term "lupus" (meaning "wolf" in Latin) to describe an ulcerative skin disease dates to the late thirteenth century, though it was not until the mid-nineteenth that two specific skin diseases were classified as lupus erythematosus and lupus vulgaris. The term may derive from the rapacity and virulence of the disease; a 1590 work described it ...

  7. Eastern wolf - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eastern_wolf

    In 2016, the Committee on the Status of Species at Risk in Ontario recognized the Algonquin wolf as a Canis sp. (Canis species) differentiated from the hybrid Great Lakes wolves which it found were the result of "hybridization and backcrossing among Eastern Wolf (Canis lycaon) (aka C. lupus lycaon), Gray Wolf (C. lupus), and Coyote (C. latrans)".

  8. Lupus erythematosus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lupus_erythematosus

    Lupus erythematosus is a collection of autoimmune diseases in which the human immune system becomes hyperactive and attacks healthy tissues. [1] Symptoms of these diseases can affect many different body systems, including joints, skin, kidneys, blood cells, heart, and lungs. The most common and most severe form is systemic lupus erythematosus.

  9. Parasites and pathogens of wolves - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parasites_and_pathogens_of...

    Lice, such as Trichodectes canis, may cause sickness in wolves, but rarely death. Ticks of the genus Ixodes can infect wolves with Lyme disease and Rocky Mountain spotted fever. [4] The tick Dermacentor pictus also infests wolves. Other ectoparasites include chewing lice, sucking lice and the fleas Pulex irritans and Ctenocephalides canis. [5]