J. Ring
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17670
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. 2116-2117
F. Rongioletti
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17653
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. 2121-2122
L. Rudnicka
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17651
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. 2123-2124
Hans W. Rothenborg
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17661
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. 2125-2127
G.V. Oliveira,L.D. Metsavaht,B.V Kadunc,S.K.K. Jedwab,M.S. Bressan,H.O. Stolf,R.G. Castro,S.M.F.M.C. Bezerra,D.A. Calil,F.A.Z. Addor,J.C.S. Fraga,C.M.S. Reis,E. Reis-Filho,M.R. Silva,M. Ramos-e-Silva,D.M. Hexsel
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17484
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. 2128-2142
Keloids (K) and hypertrophic scars (HS) are abnormal responses to wound healing that occur as the result of dermal inflammation. Despite the advances on their treatment, many patients still suffer from the negative effects of excessive scarring; its approach is impaired by the lack of objective data on different treatments and the large genetic variability among patients and the difficulties in producing multicentre studies. Their incidence among the Brazilian population is high, as the result of an admixture of Amerindians, Europeans and Africans ancestral roots. With the aim of producing multicentre studies on K and HS, a panel of senior Brazilian dermatologists focused on their treatment was invited to contribute with the K and HS Treatment Brazilian Guidelines. In the first part of this study, different treatment modalities for keloids and HS are fully reviewed by the panel. The second part of the study presents a consensus recommendation of treatment for different types of lesions. More than a literature review, this article aims to show the pitfalls and pearls of each therapeutic option, as well as a therapeutic approach by the Panel of Experts on keloids and Scars on a highly mixed population, providing simple guidelines.
K. Thormann,H. Aubert,S. Barbarot,A. Britsch-Yilmaz,P. Chernyshov,M. Deleuran,M. El-Hachem,J. de Groot,A. Heratizadeh,F. Raymakers,J.F. Stalder,A. Wollenberg,D. Simon
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17487
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. 2143-2148
In chronic skin diseases such as atopic dermatitis (AD), therapeutic failure due to poor patient adherence to treatment is commonly reported. Therapeutic patient education (TPE) is an approach to improve self-management and adherence. Several studies demonstrated that TPE programmes have positive effects on disease management resulting in decreased disease severity and improved quality of life in AD patients. Various healthcare professionals (dermatologists, nurses, psychologists, dieticians) have been involved. TPE performed by trained dermatology nurses are highly efficient and improve various health-related outcomes. The aim of this position paper is to analyse the aims, modalities and efficacy of TPE in AD, to identify specific roles of dermatology nurses, to assess qualification requirements, and to propose practical recommendations. Potential activities of nurses in ongoing and future TPE programmes for AD patients will be discussed.
J.J. Grob,C. Gaudy-Marqueste,A. Guminski,J. Malvehy,N. Basset-seguin,B. Bertrand,P. Fernandez-Penas,R. Kaufmann,I. Zalaudek,M.C. Fargnoli,L. Tagliaferri,B. Fertil,V. Del Marmol,A. Stratigos,C. Garbe,K. Peris
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17467
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. 2149-2153
No simple staging system has emerged for basal cell carcinomas (BCCs), since they do not follow the TNM process, and practitioners failed to agree on simple clinical or pathological criteria as a basis for a classification. Operational classification of BCCs is required for decision-making, trials and guidelines. Unsupervised clustering of real cases of difficult-to-treat BCCs (DTT-BCCs; part 1) has demonstrated that experts could blindly agree on a five groups classification of DTT-BCCs based on five patterns of clinical situations.
W.M.B. Sim,M.X. Zeng,A. Rojas-Garcia
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17599
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. 2154-2165
Childhood ultraviolet radiation exposure has a strong connection to the development of skin cancer in later life. Therefore, there have been numerous sun protection educational programmes targeted to this age group. However, the association between these have not been well established. This systematic review aims to summarize the evidence on, and assess, the effectiveness of educational programmes in improving sun protection among children under age-18. The protocol was prospectively registered in the PROSPERO database (CRD42020178264). Per PRISMA guidelines, bibliographic databases CENTRAL, OVID (EMBASE, MEDLINE, PsycINFO), LILACS, trial registries, grey literature and other sources were systematically searched for randomized controlled and clinical controlled trials published between database inception to 9 June 2020. Dual independent review of abstracts and full texts was performed. Eligible studies were assessed for methodological quality using the Cochrane risk-of-bias tool. The primary outcome was postintervention scores [standardized mean difference (SMD)] for sun protection (i) knowledge (ii) attitudes and beliefs (iii) behavioural intentions and behaviours. Sidik-Jonkman random effects meta-analysis, sensitivity and subgroup analyses were performed for specific outcomes (sunscreen and sun-safe hat use) which were sufficiently reported. 1350 publications were identified and 24 eligible trials, conducted across 8 different countries, with sufficient aggregate data were included. Small-to-moderate effects of educational programmes were observed across all sun protection outcomes of interest, but negligible effect sizes were demonstrated when specific outcomes were meta-analysed – sunscreen use, SMD 0.18 (95% CI 0.07–0.29; n = 8) and sun-safe hat use, SMD 0.08 (95% CI, 0.00–0.16; n = 6). A promising approach in the future may be to consider targeting children in secondary education with a digitally delivered interactive intervention. Current evidence, however, is insufficient to assess the effects of potential moderators and change in sun protection outcomes is likely not one-size-fits-all. Further research is warranted to direct intervention design and public policy.
C.C. von Stülpnagel,M. Augustin,L. Düpmann,N. da Silva,R. Sommer
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17348
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. 2166-2184
Patients with chronic skin diseases suffer from physical and psychosocial impairments which can lead to a cumulative life-long burden. Therefore, the concept of cumulative life course impairment (CLCI) was introduced, referring to the non-reversible damage due to the persistent life-long burden. This systematic review (PROSPERO registry number: CRD42020179141) aimed at mapping the risk factors and the associated burden over time in patients with psoriasis, atopic dermatitis (AD) and hidradenitis suppurativa (HS). Three electronic databases were searched (date of the last search: December 2019). Studies with a longitudinal study design that assessed the association between a risk factor and the associated burden over time in patients with psoriasis, AD and HS were included. Quality assessment of the included studies was done using Critical Appraisal Skills Programme (CASP) checklists. In total, 40 publications reflecting 25 different studies were included: nine studies addressed patients with psoriasis, 13 patients with AD, two studies included patients with HS and one study enrolled patients with psoriasis and AD, respectively. Twenty-two potential risk factors with underlying evidence were found in this review. These risk factors include mainly sociodemographic (such as age or gender) and clinical (such as disease severity or comorbidities) variables. Disease severity and comorbidities were the most often studied risk factors, while only a few studies evaluated psychosocial risk factors over time. Patients with chronic skin diseases are at high risk to develop a life-long negative impact from the disease. However, there is a lack of data that evaluates the psychosocial burden and its influence on the patients’ life course over time. The risk factors found in this review help to identify patients at risk, to treat them adequately and, ultimately, to prevent CLCI. These results can be the basis to develop a highly needed tool to assess the risk for CLCI in the future.
F. Seirafianpour,S. Sodagar,S. Mozafarpoor,H.R. Baradaran,P. Panahi,B. Hassanlouei,A. Goodarzi
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17374
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. 2185-2198
Striae distensae (SD) or stretch marks are among the most common forms of atrophic scarring and cosmetic problems, especially in women, that negatively affect quality of life. The main causes of SD vary widely, but the most significant ones include obesity, pregnancy, high corticosteroid levels, weight changes, endocrine disorders and genetic predispositions. Various modalities are available for the treatment of SD; however, there is still no gold standard therapy for this condition. Given the many questions concerning the preferred therapeutic modalities for SD or their overall cost-effectiveness, this comprehensive systematic review discusses the most prevalent, recent and promising therapies for SD in three main categories, including single therapy, therapeutic comparisons and combination therapy. A systematic search was carried out in Medline, Scopus, Web of Science and Google Scholar for original articles published on the treatment of SD by 20 May 2019. One hundred articles were reviewed and divided into three categories. In the single therapy category, we found that laser and other light-based devices and topical treatments are the most commonly applied interventions. In the therapeutic comparison category, we found that most of the common therapeutic modalities are equally effective and there is no significant difference between them in side-effects and treatment duration. In the combination therapy category, we found that the combination of two or more modalities is usually better than using each one alone.
A. Aharaz,G.B.E. Jemec,R.J. Hay,D.M.L. Saunte
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17462
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. 2199-2207
Tinea capitis is a fungal infection mostly affecting children. Epidemiology is changing over time due to migration, and it has been estimated that up to 40% of children from certain developing countries are affected. The mechanism of transmission is still unclear although asymptomatic carriage seems to have an influence in establishing persistent reservoirs that can cause or fuel epidemics. Screening and prophylactic treatment of close contacts of tinea capitis patients are therefore recommended by several international guidelines, but vaguely and not consistent. The treatments involved can be expensive, hard to integrate in everyday life, have well-known side effects and some are not approved for the treatment of children. The aim of this review was to clarify the evidence behind treatment of human asymptomatic carriers of tinea capitis. Databases were searched for the ‘tinea capitis’, ‘carriers’ and ‘treatment’. Inclusion criteria were clinical trials, observational and interventional studies including case series (10+ cases) and case reports in English, Danish, Swedish, Norwegian and French. Reviews, guidelines, unclear reports and in vitro trials were excluded. A systematic review identified 10 studies with low to moderate evidence levels. The topical treatments ketoconazole, povidone-iodine, miconazole and the systemic antifungals terbinafine and itraconazole have all shown significant effects in the mycological eradication of fungal conidia. General prophylactic hygienic measures may have a benefit. The scientific evidence behind the treatment of asymptomatic carriage of scalp dermatophytes is sparse and not of high quality. Yet, both topical and systemic antifungal agents show treatment efficacy. Considering the possible adverse effects, topical agents are preferable, but with necessary attention to the compliance of asymptomatic contacts with treatment.
K. Hendel,G. B. E. Jemec,M. Haedersdal,S. R. Wiegell
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17492
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. 2208-2215
Basal cell carcinoma (BCC) is the most common type of cancer and an increasing incidence stimulates the interest in new treatments such as electrochemotherapy (ECT) with bleomycin. This systematic review focuses on literature from the MEDLINE, Embase, Web of Science, and Cochrane databases. Bleomycin-ECT studies (n = 32) were sorted by the level of evidence adjusted for their BCC data only. The studies included a single randomised controlled trial (RCT), 15 uncontrolled clinical trials, three registry studies, six prospective case series and seven retrospective case series. A Cochrane risk-of-bias assessment of the RCT identified some minor concerns but no predicted risk of bias. The studies were also grouped by bleomycin administration routes: intravenous (n = 14), intralesional (n = 9) and mixed reporting/usage (n = 9). A meta-analysis was not conducted due to the lack of RCTs and the heterogeneity of the included studies. The results of the RCT generally reflected the findings of the other included studies and showed a 92% complete response in 65 bleomycin-ECT–treated BCCs after 2 months, improving to 100% after re-treatment, with a low risk of recurrence. Based on the RCT results and overall data, future studies on BCC treatment with bleomycin-ECT should include large RCTs that compare bleomycin-ECT with standard of care, cost analyses, and clinical feasibility.
C. Posch
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17660
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. 2216-2218
S. Atilla,Ö. Gököz,S. Özer,G. Elçin
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17574
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. 2219-2224
Mohs micrographic surgery is the gold standard treatment for high-risk non-melanoma skin cancers. The success of Mohs relies on accurate histopathologic evaluation. Due to law restrictions in some European countries, Mohs surgeons are not permitted to report on histopathology; therefore, a pathologist evaluates the frozen sections.
R.A. Cowan,J.J. Scarisbrick,P.L. Zinzani,J.P. Nicolay,L. Sokol,L. Pinter-Brown,P. Quaglino,L. Iversen,R. Dummer,A. Musiek,F. Foss,T. Ito,J-P. Rosen,M.C. Medley
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17523
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. 2225-2238
Mogamulizumab was compared with vorinostat in the phase 3 MAVORIC trial (NCT01728805) in 372 patients with relapsed/refractory mycosis fungoides (MF) or Sézary syndrome (SS) who had failed ?1 prior systemic therapy. Mogamulizumab significantly prolonged progression-free survival (PFS), with a superior objective response rate (ORR) vs. vorinostat.
L. Kemény
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17655
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. 2239-2240
N. da Silva,R. Sommer,C.-E. Ortmann,P. Jagiello,T. Bachhuber,M. Augustin
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17525
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. 2241-2249
Cross-cultural differences in healthcare policies and patient–physician communication may influence the quality of care and patients' perceived benefits and satisfaction with psoriasis treatment.
N. Watson,N. Wilson,F. Shmarov,P. Zuliani,N.J. Reynolds,S.C. Weatherhead
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17519
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. 2250-2258
Remission duration and treatment response following phototherapy for psoriasis are highly variable and factors influencing these are poorly understood.
M. Gonçalo
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17659
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. 2259-2260
A. Reich
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17664
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. 2261-2262
S. Barbarot,F. Boralevi,J. Shourick,F. Sampogna,E. Mahé,S. Merhand,A.-C. Bursztejn,S. Mallet,K. Ezzedine,C. Abasq,C. Taïeb,A. Lasek,C. Bodemer
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17526
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. 2263-2269
Atopic dermatitis (AD) is a chronic, relapsing, inflammatory skin disease. Therapeutic patient education (TPE) has been demonstrated to be effective in AD in reducing disease severity and improving coping and quality of life.
M. Augustin,C. Garbe,K. Hagenström,J. Petersen,M.P. Pereira,S. Ständer
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17485
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. 2270-2276
There are currently no published population-based data on prurigo and pruritus epidemiology in Germany.
A. Hafner,P.D. Ghislain,R. Kovács,R. Batchelor,A.C. Katoulis,B. Kirby,H. Banayan,M. Schonbrun
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17551
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. 2277-2284
Hidradenitis suppurativa (HS), a chronic, recurrent, debilitating skin disease, is characterized by painful, inflammatory, subcutaneous lesions of the axilla, inguinal and anogenital regions. Overall prevalence of HS is ˜1%, and the impact of disease on patient quality of life (QoL) and healthcare resource utilization (HRU) is high.
G.-S. Tiplica
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17667
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. 2285-2286
A. Delfosse,N. Bouscaren,N. Dupin,J. Jaubert,P.L. Tran,C. Saint Pastou,R. Manaquin,P. Poubeau,P. Gerardin,A. Bertolotti
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17572
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. 2287-2292
Syphilis is a sexually transmitted infection (STI) with a global prevalence estimated at 0.5% in 2012. Syphilis has been on the rise among men who have sex with men (MSM) in high-income countries and remains at endemic levels in low- and middle-income countries. This trend, however, has not been observed in Reunion Island.
L. Frommherz,A. Krause,J. Kopp,A. Hotz,S. Hübner,A. Reimer-Taschenbrecker,F. Casetti,B. Zirn,J. Fischer,C. Has
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17524
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. 2293-2299
Non-syndromic congenital ichthyosis describes a heterogeneous group of hereditary skin disorders associated with erythroderma and scaling at birth. Although both severe and mild courses are known, the prediction of the natural history in clinical practice may be challenging.
H. Li,X. Zhang,W. Wei,L. Zhang,Z. Chen,M. Cao,J. Cheng,L. Du,J. Zhao,Z. Fang,X. Li,P. Chen
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17571
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. 2300-2304
Surgery is the most effective way to treat bromhidrosis, but postoperative complications are still the biggest obstacles for patients to choose surgical treatment.
T. Passeron
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17652
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. 2305-2307
J. Deinsberger,M. Felhofer,J.P. Kläger,P. Petzelbauer,N. Gierlinger,B. Weber
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17573
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. 2308-2316
Arteriolosclerotic ulcers of Martorell are histologically characterized by hyaline arteriolosclerosis resulting in concentric occlusion of the arteriolar lumina. Although several authors have previously reported on hyaline changes in hypertensive arteriolopathies, so far, little information is available on the molecular composition of hyaline wall depositions.
A. Rossi,F. Magri,G. Caro,S. Michelini,M. Di Fraia,M.C. Fortuna,G. Pellacani,M. Carlesimo
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17558
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. 2317-2323
Non-invasive diagnostic methods in clinical dermatology are widely used to reduce the need for invasive techniques, with great advantages in terms of cost and time. Dermoscopy is the reference test for the in vivo diagnosis of cutaneous lesions, and when it is performed on the scalp region it is named trichoscopy. Fluorescence advanced videodermoscopy (FAV) has been lately proposed as a new non-invasive method for the in vivo skin examination at high magnification, with cell-level resolution. So far, it has shown promising results for the assessment of melanocytic and vascular lesions and for the in vivo diagnosis of parasitosis.
S. Hudgens,P. Rich,Z. Geng,D. Williams,A. Fleischer,A. Ganguli
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17387
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. 2324-2330
Several clinician-rated scoring systems are available to assess nail psoriasis severity, but only one has been partially validated.
E. Hadeler,B.W. Morrison,A. Tosti
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17448
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e699-e709
D. Thaçi,D. Jullien,A. Egeberg,J.M. Carrascosa,J.J. Wu,I. Pau-Charles,P. Gisondi
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17427
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e709-e711
J.E. Kim,H. Lee,S.S. Paik,J.-Y. Moon,H.J. Yoon,S.-H. Kim
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17476
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e711-e714
P. Gisondi,S. Cazzaniga,S. Di Leo,S. Piaserico,F. Bellinato,M. Pizzolato,A. Gatti,A. Eccher,M. Brunelli,D. Saraggi,G. Girolomoni,L. Naldi
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17493
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e714-e715
A.C. Leasure,S.E. Cowper,J. McNiff,J.M. Cohen
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17494
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e716-e717
N.T. Lopes,C.E.O. Pinilla,A.C. Gerbase
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17495
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e717-e719
D. Falkenhain-López,C. Gutiérrez-Collar,J. Arroyo-Andrés,I. Gallego-Gutiérrez,J.L. Rodríguez-Peralto,A. Sánchez-Velázquez
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17497
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e719-e721
O.Y. Marcantonio-Santa Cruz,A. Vidal-Navarro,D. Pesqué,A.M. Giménez-Arnau,R.M. Pujol,G. Martin-Ezquerra
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17498
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e721-e722
A. Mohta,S. K. Jain,R. D. Mehta,A. Arora
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17499
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e722-e725
N. Cameli,M. Silvestri,M. Mariano,S.P. Nisticò,A. Cristaudo
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17500
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e725-e727
L. Quattrini,L. Verardi,G. Caldarola,G. Peluso,C. De Simone,M. D’Agostino
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17502
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e727-e729
R. Merhy,A.-S. Sarkis,J. Kaikati,L. El Khoury,S. Ghosn,F. Stephan
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17504
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e729-e730
W. Kempf,N. Kettelhack,F. Kind,S. Courvoisier,J. Galambos,K. Pfaltz
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17506
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e730-e732
A. Kreuter,S.-N. Burmann,B. Burkert,F. Oellig,A.-L. Michalowitz
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17514
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e733-e735
E. Koch,F. Villanueva,M.A. Marchetti,Á. Abarzúa-Araya,C. Cárdenas,J.C. Castro,F. Dominguez,K. Droppelmann,N. Droppelmann,H. Galindo,A. León,J. Madrid,M. Molgó,S. Mondaca,P.H. Montero,P. Uribe,M.A. Villaseca,E. Vinés,C. Navarrete-Dechent
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17522
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e735-e737
R. Pasternack,S. Pohjavaara
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17543
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e737-e738
O.Yu. Olisova,N.P. Teplyuk,E.V. Grekova,A.A. Lepekhova
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17546
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e738-e741
L. Guzmán-Pérez,M. Puerta-Peña,D. Falkenhain-López,J. Montero-Menárguez,C. Gutiérrez-Collar,J.L. Rodríguez-Peralto,J. Sanz-Bueno
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17547
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e741-e743
A. Smola,S. Samadzadeh,L. Müller,O. Adams,B. Homey,P. Albrecht,S. Meller
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17549
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e743-e745
F. Nastro,G. Fabbrocini,F. di Vico,C. Marasca
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17550
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e745-e747
D. Revilla-Nebreda,M. Roncero-Riesco,Á. Santos-Briz,M. Medina-Migueláñez,N. Segurado-Tostón,C. Román-Curto
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17553
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e747-e749
M. Alpalhão,P. Filipe
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17555
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e750-e752
M. Lehmann,P. Schorno,R.E. Hunger,K. Heidemeyer,L. Feldmeyer,N. Yawalkar
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17561
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e752-e755
J. Nathalie,J. Chang,K. Ezzedine,M. Rodrigues
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17382
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e755-e756
A.L. Matos,C. Figueiredo,F. Alves,N. Pereira,M. Gonçalo
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17423
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e756-e758
P.A. Vieyra-Garcia,L. Cerroni,R.A. Clark,P. Wolf
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17425
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e758-e760
E. Robustelli Test,E. Moggio,P. Sena,D.M. Gambini
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17426
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e761-e762
A. Niforou,D. Sgouros,A. Lallas,A. Zaras,A. Scope,H. Tsao,G. Argenziano,C. Longo,H. Kittler,A. Stratigos,IDS Thin NM Project Investigators
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17428
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e762-e765
M. Tramontana,K. Hansel,L. Bianchi,R. Marietti,L. Stingeni
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17429
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e765-e767
R. Sacchetti,G. Gregori,E. Moggio,L. Gobbo,L. Bonzano,G. Pellacani
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17431
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e767-e768
E. Moreau,H. Rousseau,A. Marzouki Zerouali,E. Melgar,J. Henry,J.L. Schmutz,G.F. Escobar,A.C. Bursztejn
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17435
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e768-e770
E. Cinotti,M. Bertello,C. Habougit,F. Rongioletti,F. Cambazard,J.C. Antoine,L. Tognetti,P. Rubegni,J.L. Perrot
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17440
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e770-e772
T.E. Sangers,T. Nijsten,M. Wakkee
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17442
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e772-e774
A.S. Bohne,C. Dietrich,K. Morrison,T. Schwarz,U. Wehkamp,M. Kaeding
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17453
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e774-e776
S. Siskou,A. Lallas,K. Theodoropoulos,D. Sgouros,M. Trakatelli,A. Patsatsi,A. Trigoni,M. Manoli,C. Papageorgiou,K. Liopyris,A. Katoulis,A. Stratigos,D. Ioannides,E. Lazaridou,Z. Apalla
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17455
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e776-e779
S. Forkel,J. Mörlein,M. Sulk,C. Beutner,W. Rohe,M.P. Schön,J. Geier,T. Buhl
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17456
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e779-e782
Q. Wang,F. Qiu,H. Wu,Y.-M. Fan
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17457
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e782-e784
F. Farnetani,G. Pedroni,N. Lippolis,M. Giovani,S. Ciardo,J. Chester,S. Kaleci,C. Pezzini,C. Cantisani,A. Dattola,M. Manfredini,E. Dika,A. Patrizi,G. Pellacani
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17470
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e784-e787
J. Zhang,L. Loman,A.N. Voorberg,M.L.A. Schuttelaar
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17471
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e787-e790
L.T. Fernández,D.E. Kubelis-López,F.Z. Muñoz-Garza,J. Ocampo-Candiani,E.L. Alba-Rojas
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17473
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e790-e792
A. Mori,Y. Kaku,T. Dainichi
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17474
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e792-e793
I. Papadimitriou,K. Bakirtzi,A. Lallas,E. Vakirlis,E. Sotiriou,E. Lazaridou,D. Ioannides
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17475
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e793-e796
M.S. Jang,K.S. Suh,D.I. Kwon,J.H. Jung,S.H. Seong,K.H. Lee,J.H. Kang,J.B. Park
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17477
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e796-e798
V.S. Narayan,N.F. Post,P.P.M. Van Zuijlen,M.W. Bekkenk,A. Wolkerstorfer
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17478
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e798-e801
A. Ibrahim,F. Buket Basmanav,G. Bohelay,A. Lévy,R.C. Betz,F. Caux
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17479
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e801-e803
M. Onaka,H. Mitsui,A. Honobe-Tabuchi,N. Deguchi,Y. Ogawa,S. Shimada,T. Kawamura
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17481
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e803-e804
A. Velissari,E. Lakiotaki,V. Nikolaou,K.V. Argyropoulos,A. Stratigos,G. Daikos,K. Konstantopoulos,M. Siakantaris
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17482
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e805-e807
A. Kreuter,S. Silling,A. Potthoff,F. Oellig,A.L. Michalowitz,U. Wieland
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17496
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e807-e809
R. Matthews,A. Wray,S. Walsh,C.E.M. Griffiths,H.S. Young
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17501
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e809-e811
S. Traidl,L.M. Roesner,P. Kienlin,G. Begemann,A. Schreiber,T. Werfel,A. Heratizadeh
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17507
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e812-e815
E. Edigin,M.M. Rivera Pavon,P.O. Eseaton,C. Hernandez,A. Manadan
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17508
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e815-e817
O. Ozbagcivan,D.F. Ayozcan,B. Lebe
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17509
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e817-e819
H. Mochizuki,C.D. Kursewicz,J.S. Nomi,G. Yosipovitch
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17510
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e819-e821
M. Lagassy,M. Aroux-Pavard,P. Joly,F. Tetart,O. Bauvin
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17511
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e821-e823
S. Traidl,Y. Angela,A. Stender,A. Kulberg,M. Tronnier,N.K. Prenzler,M.P. Wattjes,A. Kapp,M. Stangel,V. Schacht,T. Werfel
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17512
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e823-e826
R.R.Z. Conic,J. Maghfour,G. Damiani,W. Bergfeld
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17513
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e826-e828
A. Blauvelt,M. Ramharter,A.D. Cohen,W. Xu,H. Patel,C. Schuster,E. Riedl,L. Puig
doi : 10.1111/jdv.17554
Volume 35, Issue 11 p. e828-e831
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