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Airborne dermatoses

Outside of this familiar landscape , the occurrence of occupational airborne dermatoses, i.e. due to agents carried by or through the air, has been underestimated in the past. Pirila (1950) was the first to promote the concept of airborne dermatoses on clinical and experimental grounds. In his extensive paper, the author called attention - almost exclusively - to allergic conditions, referring, for instance, to cases of thiokol dermatitis he had observed in Finland after World War II. Later on, examples of occupational dermatoses closely related to those caused by airborne skin offenders were occasionally reported throughout the relevant literature (Pirila et al. 1963). [Pg.193]

Treatment and prevention measures commonly used in occupational dermatology can be applied to airborne dermatoses. [Pg.199]

Bircher AJ, Bigliardi P, Langaver Messmer S, Surber C (1999) Occupational airborne contact dermatitis from diphency-prone in a pharmacy employee. Contact Dermatitis 41 52 Bjorkner BE (1994) Industrial airborne dermatoses. Dermatol Clin 12 501-509... [Pg.487]

Camarasa G, Alomar A (1980) Contact dermatitis to an H2 antagonist. Contact Dermatitis 6 152-153 Camarasa JG, Barnadas M (1982) Occupational dermatosis by vitamin K3 sodium bisulphite. Contact Dermatitis 8 268 Caraffini S, Assalve D, Stingeni L, Lisi P (1994) Tylosin, an airborne contact allergen in veterinarians. Contact Dermatitis 31 327-328... [Pg.487]


See other pages where Airborne dermatoses is mentioned: [Pg.193]    [Pg.194]    [Pg.479]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.479 ]




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