Showing 5451-5460 of 10820 results for "".
- Rapamycin Lotion Reduces Facial Tumors Caused by Tuberous Sclerosishttps://practicaldermatology.com/news/rapamycin-lotion-reduces-facial-tumors-caused-by-tuberous/2457750/Rapamycin lotion significantly reduced the disfiguring facial tumors affecting more than 90 percent of people with tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC), researchers from The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (UTHealth) report. Findings of the multicenter, international stud
- Skincare on Trial: Revision Introduces New Patient-Friendly Optionhttps://practicaldermatology.com/news/skincare-on-trial-revision-introduces-new-patient-friendly-option/2457752/Revision Skincare has introduced a collection of five comprehensive 45-day trial regimens they say are designed to address the needs of
- EWG: Two-Thirds of Sunscreen Products Offer Poor Protection or Have Worrisome Ingredientshttps://practicaldermatology.com/news/ewg-two-thirds-of-sunscreen-products-offer-poor-protection-or-have-worrisome-ingredients/2457756/The Environmental Working Group (EWG) released its 12th annual Guide to Sunscreens, rating the safety and efficacy of more than 1,000 sunscreens, moisturizers and lip balms that advertise sun protection, and found
- ASDS: Skin Cancer Treatment Ranks as Most-Performed Procedure of 2017https://practicaldermatology.com/news/asds-skin-cancer-treatment-ranks-as-most-performed-procedure-of-2017/2457761/The American Society for Dermatologic Surgery (ASDS) members performed nearly 12 million medically necessary and cosmetic procedures in 2017 – over 10 percent more than 2016 and doubling since 2012. For the sixth year in a row, the 2017 ASDS Survey on Dermatologic Procedures reveale
- Teledermoscopy Speeds Time to Case Resolution. In Australiahttps://practicaldermatology.com/news/teledermoscopy-speeds-time-to-case-resolution-in-australia/2457768/Teledermatology for skin cancer referral and triage would add to the costs of care but would result in more rapid clinical resolution&m
- Sciton Announces New Leadership Teamhttps://practicaldermatology.com/news/sciton-announces-new-leadership-team/2457777/Sciton has an all new leadership team. The new Sciton leaders are: Aaron Burton, Chief Operating Officer Todd Sternbach, Vice President of Strategic Sales Initiatives David Percival, Vice President / General Manager of Sciton International Lacee Jacobson Na
- Study Seeks to Harness the Power of Probiotics to Treat Eczemahttps://practicaldermatology.com/news/study-seeks-to-harness-the-power-of-probiotics-to-treat-eczema/2457778/A new clinical trial is investigating whether beneficial bacteria can help treat eczema by restoring the natural microbial balance of healthy skin. "There are over 1,000 species of bacteria that all live in balance on healthy skin, some that even produce natural antibiotics. However,
- Acne Survey at Twins Convention Affirms Genetic Linkhttps://practicaldermatology.com/news/acne-survey-at-twins-convention-affirms-genetic-link/2457789/A survey of identical and fraternal twin pairs at the Twins Days Festival in Twinsburg, OH, and published in the April issue of the Journal of Drugs in Dermatology, shows acne may be primarily caused by genetics.
- First Androgenetic Alopecia Patient Dosed in a Pilot Study with Aclaris' ATI-502 Topicalhttps://practicaldermatology.com/news/first-androgenetic-alopecia-patient-dosed-in-a-pilot-study-with-aclaris-ati-502-topical/2457795/Aclaris Therapeutics, Inc. initiated a Phase 2 open-label study of ATI-502, a topical Janus Kinase (JAK) 1/3 inhibitor (ATI-502 Topical), in patients with androgenetic alopecia (AGA), a condition characterized by a genetically determined male/female-pattern baldness. This trial will
- Study: Derms More Likely than PAs to Catch Early Skin Cancerhttps://practicaldermatology.com/news/study-derms-more-likely-than-pas-to-catch-early-skin-cancer/2457800/Physician assistants may be more likely than dermatologists to perform unnecessary skin biopsies to check for cancer and are less likely to accurately diagnose early stage skin cancers, according to new research conducted by the University of Pittsbur