Sentences with phrase «clinical skin lesions»

Not exact matches

Nibbering plans to test SAAP - 148 in clinical trials soon — first to disinfect lesions from the inflammatory skin disease atopic dermatitis, then to treat the infected wounds of burn patients — once an ethical review board gives its approval.
The results were identical to the progression seen in human skin lesions obtained from patients in UCSF's Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center and examined in the Clinical Cancer Genomics Laboratory, which Bastian directs.
Trichophyton schoenleinii first proven to cause skin lesions --(Principles and Practice of Clinical Mycology — 1996
About the Study The study, «Efficacy and safety of oclacitinib for the control of pruritus and associated skin lesions in dogs with canine allergic dermatitis,» was conducted as a double - masked, placebo - controlled clinical trial aimed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of APOQUEL compared with placebo.
Clinical signs include: dry, harsh cough, fever, anorexia, weight loss, weakness, lameness, seizures, ataxia, draining skin lesions, and blindness.
Fifty - seven dogs with clinical manifestations of mostly pruritic skin lesions or alterations, skin fold pyoderma's and other forms of dermatitis, corroborated by predominantly positive fungal and bacterial skin isolates, were enrolled by seven practising veterinarians and randomly allocated to two study groups (28:29) and were treated twice daily with a blinded topical preparation.
The skin lesions have a similar age of onset and clinical progression, but with dermatomyositis, erythematous plaques or vesicles can not be induced in normal skin by applying mild friction.
Clinically, the appearance of the skin lesions may lead your veterinarian to suspect calcium deposits as the problem, particularly when the age, breed and clinical history are considered.
Clinical signs of a dog's staph infection include skin sores, lesions or scabs, pimples, hair loss, redness of skin and excessive dander.
The clinical signs of blastomycosis may vary with the target organs affected and may include one or all of the following: anorexia, depression, weight loss, fever (103 degrees or higher) that doesn't respond to antibiotics, coughing, shortness of breath, exercise intolerance, enlarged lymph nodes, eye disease, or skin lesions that drain bloody or purulent material.
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