Alopecia areata is regarded as a tissue-restricted autoimmune disease of hair follicles in which follicular activity is arrested because of the continued activity of lymphocytic infiltrates. Actual loss of hair follicles does not occur, even in hairless lesions. A variety of immunomodulating therapies, including contact sensitizers and immunomodulators, are part of the usual armamentarium for this disorder. None of these treatments have been consistent in their efficacy, and many have untoward side effects. Nevertheless, their uses in valid animal models provide a tool to dissect out molecular mechanisms of therapeutic effects. For several decades, both mechlorethamine (for the treatment of cutaneous T cell lymphoma) and anthralin (for the ...
A disease closely resembling human alopecia areata was found in a large production colony of C3H/HeJ...
Grafting alopecia areata affected C3H/HeJ mouse skin to littermates induces alopecia areata, but hig...
Disease is not limited to humans. Rather, humans are but another mammal in a continuum, and as such,...
Alopecia areata is regarded as a tissue-restricted autoimmune disease of hair follicles in which fol...
Alopecia areata is regarded as a tissue-restricted autoimmune disease of hair follicles in which fol...
Alopecia areata is an autoimmune disease targeted at hair follicles with infiltrated T lymphocytes p...
Although many therapeutic modalities have been tested on alopecia areata, patient outcomes have been...
Rodent models of human disease provide an important tool in the investigation of genetic and environ...
Over the past decade, basic research has established alopecia areata as a T cell–mediated autoimmune...
With our current view of alopecia areata as an autoimmune disease, it is probable that disease devel...
Alopecia areata is a suspected autoimmune hair loss disease. In a rodent model, alopecia areata can ...
Disease is not limited to humans. Rather, humans are but another mammal in a continuum, and as such,...
Alopecia areata (AA) is a cell-mediated autoimmune disease that targets actively growing hair follic...
One of the most common human autoimmune diseases, alopecia areata (AA), is characterized by sudden, ...
Laboratory mice have become the premier animal model for most human and domestic animal diseases, an...
A disease closely resembling human alopecia areata was found in a large production colony of C3H/HeJ...
Grafting alopecia areata affected C3H/HeJ mouse skin to littermates induces alopecia areata, but hig...
Disease is not limited to humans. Rather, humans are but another mammal in a continuum, and as such,...
Alopecia areata is regarded as a tissue-restricted autoimmune disease of hair follicles in which fol...
Alopecia areata is regarded as a tissue-restricted autoimmune disease of hair follicles in which fol...
Alopecia areata is an autoimmune disease targeted at hair follicles with infiltrated T lymphocytes p...
Although many therapeutic modalities have been tested on alopecia areata, patient outcomes have been...
Rodent models of human disease provide an important tool in the investigation of genetic and environ...
Over the past decade, basic research has established alopecia areata as a T cell–mediated autoimmune...
With our current view of alopecia areata as an autoimmune disease, it is probable that disease devel...
Alopecia areata is a suspected autoimmune hair loss disease. In a rodent model, alopecia areata can ...
Disease is not limited to humans. Rather, humans are but another mammal in a continuum, and as such,...
Alopecia areata (AA) is a cell-mediated autoimmune disease that targets actively growing hair follic...
One of the most common human autoimmune diseases, alopecia areata (AA), is characterized by sudden, ...
Laboratory mice have become the premier animal model for most human and domestic animal diseases, an...
A disease closely resembling human alopecia areata was found in a large production colony of C3H/HeJ...
Grafting alopecia areata affected C3H/HeJ mouse skin to littermates induces alopecia areata, but hig...
Disease is not limited to humans. Rather, humans are but another mammal in a continuum, and as such,...