Now showing items 1-5 of 5

    • ADT-G as a promising biomarker for peripheral hyperandrogenism in adult female acne 

      Rocha, Marco [UNIFESP]; Cardozo, Karina H. M.; Carvalho, Valdemir M.; Bagatin, Edieia [UNIFESP] (Taylor & Francis Inc, 2017)
      Acne vulgaris is a chronic inflammatory disease that affects the pilosebaceous unit. Recent studies have shown an increasing number of cases of acne in adult women. These cases are predominantly normoandrogenic and present ...

    • Androgenic Hormone Profile of Adult Women with Acne 

      Cunha, Marisa Gonzaga da; Fonseca, Fernando Luiz Affonso [UNIFESP]; Machado Filho, Carlos D'Apparecida Santos [UNIFESP] (Karger, 2013-01-01)
      Acne in adult women is a hard-to-manage frequent disease with many relapse cases. It mostly interferes with quality of life and causes major social and metabolic losses for patients. This is a transversal retrospective ...

    • Modulation of Toll Like Receptor-2 on sebaceous gland by the treatment of adult female acne 

      Rocha, Marco A. D. [UNIFESP]; Guadanhim, Lilia R. S. [UNIFESP]; Sanudo, Adriana [UNIFESP]; Bagatin, Edileia [UNIFESP] (Taylor & Francis Inc, 2017)
      Adult female acne is a chronic inflammatory, immune-mediated disease that affects the pilosebaceous unit in women in their 20s to 40s, and is considered different from acne vulgaris. Propionibacterium acnes is recognized ...

    • Novas perspectivas de tratamentos para a acne através de pos-bióticos e ácido salicílico nanoencapsulado para o controle da microbiota da pele 

      Miranda, Rute Gonçalves [UNIFESP] (Universidade Federal de São Paulo, 2023-03-30)
      Por muito tempo a acne foi definida pela proliferação do Cutibacterium acnes (C.acnes), mas recentemente discute-se a hipótese de que uma possível disbiose entre os subgrupos do C.acnes é que pode levar as lesões aceicas. ...

    • Skin barrier and microbiome in acne 

      Rocha, M. A. [UNIFESP]; Bagatin, Edileia [UNIFESP] (Springer, 2018)
      Acne is an immune-mediated chronic inflammatory disease. Although several factors are involved in its pathophysiology, this process is not completely understood. Androgen hormone activity increases sebum production inside ...