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Your search keyword '"Keloid physiopathology"' showing total 184 results

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184 results on '"Keloid physiopathology"'

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1. In the face and neck, keloid scar distribution is related to skin thickness and stiffness changes associated with movement.

2. Effectiveness of various methods of manual scar therapy.

3. [Research advances on the influence of poor dietary habits on the development of keloids].

4. Exon skip-inducing variants in FLNA in an attenuated form of frontometaphyseal dysplasia.

5. Therapeutic candidates for keloid scars identified by qualitative review of scratch assay research for wound healing.

6. Laser Speckle Contrast Imaging for the Objective Assessment of Blood Perfusion in Keloids Treated With Dual-Wavelength Laser Therapy.

7. Strontium-90 brachytherapy following intralesional triamcinolone and 5-fluorouracil injections for keloid treatment: A randomized controlled trial.

8. Long-term outcomes and recurrence-free interval after the treatment of keloids with a standardized protocol.

9. Clinical features of collagen VI-related dystrophies: A large Brazilian cohort.

10. Quantitative assessment of treatment efficacy in keloids using high-frequency ultrasound and shear wave elastography: a preliminary study.

11. Scarring and wound healing.

12. The Interplay of Mechanical Stress, Strain, and Stiffness at the Keloid Periphery Correlates with Increased Caveolin-1/ROCK Signaling and Scar Progression.

13. The lived experience and quality of life with burn scarring-The results from a large-scale online survey.

14. Hyperbaric oxygen therapy can ameliorate the EMT phenomenon in keloid tissue.

15. Human adipose tissue-derived stem cells inhibit the activity of keloid fibroblasts and fibrosis in a keloid model by paracrine signaling.

16. A novel model of humanised keloid scarring in mice.

17. Insights into the Pathophysiology of Hypertrophic Scars and Keloids: How Do They Differ?

18. Tumor suppressive role of miR-1224-5p in keloid proliferation, apoptosis and invasion via the TGF-β1/Smad3 signaling pathway.

19. Role of Homeodomain-Interacting Protein Kinase 2 in the Pathogenesis of Tissue Fibrosis in Keloid-Derived Keratinocytes.

20. Endothelial dysfunction may promote keloid growth.

21. Keloid progression: a stiffness gap hypothesis.

23. Keloids and Hypertrophic Scars: Pathophysiology, Classification, and Treatment.

24. [How to optimize scarring in dermatologic surgery?]

25. An atypical foot infection.

26. Keloids: Animal models and pathologic equivalents to study tissue fibrosis.

27. Increased blood flow in keloids and adjacent skin revealed by laser speckle contrast imaging.

28. TSLP Is a Potential Initiator of Collagen Synthesis and an Activator of CXCR4/SDF-1 Axis in Keloid Pathogenesis.

30. Heat Shock Protein 90 Inhibitor (17-AAG) Induces Apoptosis and Decreases Cell Migration/Motility of Keloid Fibroblasts.

31. Where we stand with human hypertrophic and keloid scar models.

32. Human hypertrophic and keloid scar models: principles, limitations and future challenges from a tissue engineering perspective.

33. siRNA knockdown of tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase-1 in keloid fibroblasts leads to degradation of collagen type I.

34. Benefits of conservative "wait and see" approach for recurrent plantar keloid.

35. Pathological niche environment transforms dermal stem cells to keloid stem cells: a hypothesis of keloid formation and development.

36. Is survivin a novel pathway for the treatment and pathogenesis of keloid?

37. Altered expression of hyaluronan synthase and hyaluronidase mRNA may affect hyaluronic acid distribution in keloid disease compared with normal skin.

38. Roles of lipid metabolism in keloid development.

39. [Scars, physiology, classification and assessment].

40. Current concepts in the etiology and treatment of keloids.

41. Utilizing topical therapies and mitomycin to reduce scars.

42. Cutaneous innervation and itch in keloids.

43. Notch signaling pathway in keloid disease: enhanced fibroblast activity in a Jagged-1 peptide-dependent manner in lesional vs. extralesional fibroblasts.

44. [Keloid and hypertrophic scar treatment modalities. An update].

45. miR-196a downregulation increases the expression of type I and III collagens in keloid fibroblasts.

46. Histone deacetylase 2 is upregulated in normal and keloid scars.

47. An overview of biological basis of pathologic scarring.

48. Involvement of upper torso stress amplification, tissue compression and distortion in the pathogenesis of keloids.

49. The relationship between skin stretching/contraction and pathologic scarring: the important role of mechanical forces in keloid generation.

50. PET scanning in plastic and reconstructive surgery.

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