Ann Dermatol Venereol
October 1990
Oral hairy leukoplakia is a disease of the oral mucosa occurring almost exclusively in HIV-infected (mostly AIDS) patients and due to the opportunistic development of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) within the oral epithelium. Clinically, it shows as whitish patches with a shaggy surface occurring on the lateral margins of the tongue, less frequently the buccal and labial mucosa or the soft palate. Histologically, it comprises parakeratotic hyperkeratosis, acanthosis and numerous koilocytoid cells within the stratum spinosum, i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe authors review the drug treatment of Raynaud's disease. Many substances have been used including nitrate derivatives, calcium antagonists, alpha blockers, angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors, prostaglandin E1, E2 and I2, and ketanserin. The efficacy of these drugs is often partial and variable.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF