Urushiol Induced Contact Dermatitis
Links shared publicly online about this topic
DrCason.org » Mango- Beauty and the Beast-Urushiol Induced Contact Dermatitis
drcason.org — “DrCason.org » Mango- Beauty and the Beast-Urushiol Induced Contact Dermatitis” View full resource at drcason.org
Most Recently Shared on June 22, 2008 at 5:20 am By:
Published a new post: Mango- Beauty and the Beast ( http://tinyurl.com/5kxvc8 )
Contact Dermatitis, Allergic: eMedicine Dermatology
emedicine.medscape.com — “Overview: The term contact dermatitis sometimes is used incorrectly as a synonym for allergic contact dermatitis (ACD). Contact dermatitis is inflammation of the skin induced by chemicals that directly damage the skin (see Contact Dermatitis, Irritant) and ...” View full resource at emedicine.medscape.com
Most Recently Shared on April 14, 2010 at 12:42 am By:
Allergic contact dermatitis is inflammation of the skin manifested by varying degrees of erythema, edema & vesiculation.http://bit.ly/cveQXE
Protein Contact Dermatitis: eMedicine Dermatology
emedicine.medscape.com — “Overview: INTRODUCTION In 1976, Hjorth and Roed-Peterson coined the term protein contact dermatitis (PCD) to refer to an allergic skin reaction induced by proteins of either animal or plant origin.1 In 1983, Veien and colleagues defined specific ...” View full resource at emedicine.medscape.com
Most Recently Shared on April 17, 2010 at 8:44 pm By:
Does your skin break out after being exposed to plant or animal proteins? You may have protein contact dermatitis. http://bit.ly/aLLexO
Allergy/Imm Medical News about Dermatitis, Allergic Contact
mdlinx.com — “Does airborne nickel exposure induce nickel sensitization” View full resource at mdlinx.com
Most Recently Shared on May 18, 2010 at 8:42 pm By:
Does airborne nickel exposure induce nickel sensitization: Contact Dermatitis http://bit.ly/d4NYDA #AI #mdlinx
Plant Poisoning, Toxicodendron: eMedicine Emergency Medicine
emedicine.medscape.com — “Overview: Toxicodendron dermatitis is an allergic contact dermatitis (allergic phytodermatitis) that occurs from exposure to members of the plant genus Toxicodendron. In North America, this includes poison ivy, poison oak, and, much less frequently, poison sumac. Although ...” View full resource at emedicine.medscape.com
Most Recently Shared on April 30, 2010 at 8:48 pm By:
Toxicodendron dermatitis is an allergic contact dermatitis that results from certain plants, like poison ivy or oak. http://bit.ly/a1022n
Botanical Dermatology: eMedicine Dermatology
emedicine.medscape.com — “Overview: BackgroundPlant-induced contact dermatitis is divided into 5 major categories. These include allergic sensitization, mechanical irritation, chemical irritation, contact urticaria (immunologic or toxin mediated), and photosensitization. Plant products cause a variety of adverse cutaneous effects, and they are ...” View full resource at emedicine.medscape.com
Most Recently Shared on April 19, 2010 at 11:24 pm By:
Skin contact with plants can sometimes produce a reaction. The study of the reactions are botanical dermatology. http://bit.ly/ccTQzw
Elsevier
cidjournal.com — “Elsevier” View full resource at cidjournal.com
Most Recently Shared on October 22, 2011 at 10:17 pm By:
Occupational contact dermatitis in the pharmaceutical industry: Abstract: Occupation-induced skin reactions are ... http://t.co/IQ6CNKjk
Why poison oak stings -- and how you can get relief - Related Stories - ASDS Skin Source SmartBrief
smartbrief.com — “Urushiol, the chemical in poison oak responsible for rashes, takes about 15 minutes to bind to the skin, and washing it off immediately after contact can prevent an immune system reaction, writes dermatologist Derrick Adams. If the resin does set and a rash arises, topical cortisones and oral antih…” View full resource at smartbrief.com
Most Recently Shared on July 20, 2011 at 6:35 pm By:
Why poison oak stings -- and how you can get relief http://t.co/m8oedAH
Plant Poisoning, Phytophototoxins: eMedicine Emergency Medicine
emedicine.medscape.com — “Overview: Phytophotodermatitis (PPD) is a phototoxic inflammatory dermal reaction induced by exposure to certain light-sensitizing plant products followed by exposure to long-wave ultraviolet light (UV-A 320-380 nm). Both components (plant and light) are required; neither agent alone ...” View full resource at emedicine.medscape.com
Most Recently Shared on April 30, 2010 at 5:20 am By:
Certain plants can cause you to become more sensitive to the sun, resulting in serious health consequences. Learn more. http://bit.ly/cl5oDg
The Top 3 resources shared on this topic. More resources.
Key stats and trends about this topic
Featuring the top 3 experts for this topic
-
Sheila Cason
I'm the Pediatrician Next Door: Doctor, Mother, Navy Wife, Writer, Photographer, Chef
-
Susan Scroggins
Passionate about sharing quality health resources for good health. Content curator and organizer at organizedwisdom.com.
-
Susan S
Mom working in health content publishing field. Enjoy sharing information for healthy living.
Advertisement

