skin cancer
Research Topic
Language: English
This is a research topic created to provide authors with a place to attach new problem publications.
Research problems linked to this topic
- Melanoma is an aggressive type of skin cancer.
- Eczema is a common skin condition, which can have a serious impact on children and young people's wellbeing.
- Malignant melanoma is an increasing disease in China, and its molecular mechanisms of development and progression are limited.
- Atopic dermatitis (AD) is a chronic inflammatory skin disease.
- Molluscum contagiosum is a viral skin disease, most frequently affecting children and sexually active or immunocompromised adults.
- Skin cancer represents an increasingly urgent worldwide public health problem.
- Xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) patients suffer from a high incidence of skin cancers due to a defect in excision repair of UV light-damaged DNA.
- Cancer, particularly skin cancer and lymphoma, is a complication of post-transplantation immunosuppression.
- Non-melanoma skin cancers include basal and squamous cell carcinoma.
- Skin inflammation induced by ultraviolet B (UVB) radiation is characterized by migration and chemotaxis of inflammatory cells, epidermic thickening and erythema.
- the face of alarming rates of increase in melanoma worldwide, dysplastic nevi, especially any that are clinically changing in size, color, or borders, may be regarded as playing a potential role in the progression to a tumor stage.
- Granulomatous skin diseases are a diverse group of disorders as chronic inflammatory responses to infectious and noninfectious antigens and/or other organic or inorganic materials the immune system is unable to eliminate.
- Epidermolysis bullosa is a group of rare dermal diseases characterized by hereditary and nonhereditary vesicular disorders of skin and mucous membranes that result from trauma or heat.
- Lamellar ichthyosis is an autosomal recessive type of rare skin disorders characterized with defective epidermis leading hyperkeratosis with brownish-gray scales over the body.
- Melanoma is a deadly skin cancer caused by the uncontrolled proliferation of melanocytes, a population of specialized cells that produce the skin pigment melanin.