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Top: Health: Conditions_and_Diseases: Skin_Disorders

Please check to see if your site is better suited to one of the sub-categories before submitting.

Sites submitted to this category should be in English. Non English sites should be submitted to a World category instead.

Sites selling products will not be listed here and should be submitted to Shopping.

Dermatology practices offering a service should be submitted to a proper category in Health/Medicine/Medical_Specialties/Dermatology/Clinics/

Information about skin disorders and diseases.

Albinism

Submit sites that pertain to albinism to this area.

Sites in a language other than English need to be submitted to a World category instead.

Albinism is a genetic condition resulting in a lack of pigmentation in the eyes, skin and hair. It is an inherited condition arising from the combination of recessive genes passed from both parents of an individual. A variety of problems with photosensitivity in eyesight and skin usually result from the condition.

Dercum Disease

Please submit unique web sites that deal with the Dercum's Disease (Adiposis Dolorosa), or web sites that might shed light on the mechanism that might cause such a disease.

If you have questions you think belong in a Frequently Asked Questions section, please send them to me, and I will start one.

Dercum's disease, Dercum disease, Adiposis Dolorosa, Morbus Dercum, Adiposita Dolorosa, Fettvävsreumatism, painful fatty tumors, lipomas, weakness, obesity.

This category is about a disease that has been identified for over a hundred years, yet no recent research exists on the cause of it. It was originally named by Dr. Francis X. Dercum in 1892 as adiposis dolorosa. It has since picked up his name as an identifier and both names seem to be equally popular. It generally occurs in women (less 16% are men), between the ages of 25-40 (in Sweden) or 40-65 (in the USA). They cite obesity as a cause, but they have it backwards -- the disease actually causes the obesity -- and weight reduction efforts have little effect on the pain or the obesity.

Two articles has attributed it to an autosomal dominant genetic disease, but there is no explanation why it can be benign in some and so debilitating in others.

There is no cure, and no easy way to diagnose that a person has this disease. The key(s) are painful fatty deposits (benign lipomas, either encapsulated or diffuse), where the pain has been evident for three (3) months or more.

All treatments are palliative -- treat the symptoms -- ease the pain, suction out (via liposuction) or excise the more painful tumors (remember they are benign), and counsel the patient to be able to endure the never-ending pain.

Research into the cause or the stimulus that worsens the disease is needed.

Eczema

Submit websites that are in English about Eczema to this area.

Sites selling products will not be listed here and should be submitted to a proper Shopping category instead.

Eczema is a catchall term for a variety of itchy skin inflammations/rashes which may be characterized by redness, oozing, crusting, blistering, scaling, and/or hardening. It can be caused/aggravated by both internal and/or external substances.

Eczema types/names are typically descriptive of where on the body the lesions are, a physical characteristic of or the origin of. The most common is Atopic Dermatitis with some others being Contact Dermatitis, Hand Eczema, Nummular Dermatitis, Perioral Dermatitis, Pompholyx, Seborrheic Dermatitis.

Hair Loss

Please submit only sites about hair loss to this area.

M.D. websites offering a service should consider a Regional category or a subcategory of Health: Medicine: Surgery: Cosmetic and Plastic: Surgeons and Clinics

Sites in a language other than English should be submitted to a World category.

Sites selling hair loss products should be submitted to Shopping: Health: Conditions and Diseases: Hair Loss.

Sites with helpful medical information about hair thinning, baldness, and different hair loss conditions may be found here.

Head Lice

Please submit only sites about head lice and how it is treated.

Sites selling products or treatments will not be listed here and should be submitted to a shopping category instead.

Head lice are specialized to live among the hair present on the human head and are exquisitely adapted to living mainly on the scalp and neck hairs of their human host. Lice present on other body parts covered by hair are not head lice but are either Pubic lice (Pthirus pubis) or Body lice (Pediculus humanus humanus).

Hidradenitis Suppurativa

Please submit only sites pertaining to the diagnosis, treatment, or support of sufferers of Hidradenitis Suppurativa to this category.

Sites submitted must be in English. Non-English sites should be submitted to a World category.

Hidradenitis Suppurativa (also known as Apocrinitis, Apocrine Acne, Verneuil's disease, Velpeau's disease, Fox-den disease, Pyodermia sinifica fistulans and Acne inversa) is an uncommon skin disorder characterized by the eruption of painful lesions predominantly under the arms and in the groin area. As a disease of the hair follicle, it is related to other follicular diseases, such as acne or pilonidal cyst.

Hives

Sites with information about urticaria (commonly known as hives or wheals).

Hyperhidrosis

Please submit only sites about hyperhidrosis to this area.

Sites selling products should be submitted to a Shopping category instead and will not be listed here.

Sites which are non-English should be submitted to a World category instead.

Hyperhidrosis is a medical condition in which a person sweats excessively and unpredictably. People with hyperhidrosis can sweat even when the temperature is cool, and when they are at rest.

Poison Ivy

This category is for health-oriented websites.

Sites about the poison ivy, oak, and sumac plants should be listed in Science/Biology/Flora_and_Fauna/Plantae/Magnoliophyta/Magnoliopsida/Anacardiaceae/Toxicodendron/.

Websites about the symptoms, treatment, and prevention of skin rashes and other reactions from exposure to urushiol, the toxin found in poison ivy, oak, and sumac.

Psoriasis

Sites listed here will be those offering unique and non-commercial information about the disease.

Product sites belong in Shopping/Health/Conditions_and_Diseases/Skin_Disorders/Psoriasis/ .

Psoriasis is a disease whose main symptom is gray or silvery flaky patches on the skin which are red and inflamed underneath. In the United States, it affects 2 to 2.6 percent of the population, or between 5.8 and 7.5 million people. Commonly affected areas include the scalp, elbows, knees, navel, palms, ears and groin. Psoriasis is autoimmune in origin, and is not contagious.

Rosacea

A list of reviewed sites related to the disease rosacea. Rosacea is an acne like condition that is characterised by redness and flushing.

These sites have been chosen as worthwhile resources for information about rosacea.

Seborrheic Dermatitis

Sites listed here will offer unique and non-commercial information about this condition, its symptoms and treatment.
Sites specifically about dandruff belong in Health/Beauty/Hair/Advice/

Sites with online sales of treatment products will not be listed here, and instead belong in Shopping/Health/Conditions_and_Diseases/Skin_Disorders

No category description found

Solar Keratosis

Solar keratosis, also known as actinic keratosis or "sun spots", is a common skin condition caused by exposure to the sun. Typically small in size (usually smaller than a pencil eraser), a solar keratosis lesion is often red with a scaly or crusty layer. It usually develops many years after the exposure, and if untreated, a small percentage can go on to become skin cancer.
If detected early enough, it is usually easily treated without the need for surgery.

Vitiligo

Submit sites about Vitiligo to this area.

Sites submitted must be in English. Non-English sites need to be submitted to a proper World category instead.

Sites selling products will not be listed here and should be submitted to a Shopping category instead.

Vitiligo (or leukoderma) is the patchy loss of skin pigmentation due to an auto-immune attack by the body's own immune system on skin melanocytes. It frequently begins in late adulthood, with patches of unpigmented skin appearing on extremities. The patches may grow or remain constant in size. Occasional small areas may repigment as they are recolonised by melanocytes.

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Last update: 3:11 PT, Saturday, September 29, 2007 - edit