AI Article Synopsis

  • Adamson's fringe is the upper area of the hair follicle where the hair shaft becomes hard and completely keratinized, marking the transition from the inner root sheath to the stem of the follicle.
  • In cases of Tinea capitis, a fungal infection, the fungi are limited to this fringe area and do not penetrate deeper into the hair follicle bulb.
  • The article discusses Adamson's original findings from 1895, his biography, and how Kligman's later experiments supported and expanded on the concept of Adamson's fringe and its role in understanding Tinea capitis.

Article Abstract

Adamson's fringe is located at the upper margin of the keratogenous zone of the hair follicle where the nucleated hair shaft cornifies completely and gets converted to hard anucleated keratin. It marks also the area of complete keratinization of the cuticle and Henle's layer of the inner root sheath and the beginning of the stem of the follicle. In Tinea capitis, dermatophytic infection of the hair shaft is restricted to this zone and the fungi do not penetrate further down the infected hair in the bulb of the follicle. The fungi in Adamson's words form "a fringe of mycelium surrounding the hair shaft and project below the lower margin of the sheath of spores around the root-stem." Horatio George Adamson (1865--1955), a British dermatologist first described this phenomenon, in 1895, and this article describes Adamson's fringe with a short biography of Adamson and discusses Kligman's experiments and observations on Tinea capitis which validated the observations of Adamson and the concept of Adamson's Fringe and described the pathogenesis in Tinea capitis.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3129117PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/0974-7753.82120DOI Listing

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Background: Transition of hair shaft keratinocytes from actively respiring, nucleated cells to structural cells devoid of nucleus and cytoplasm is key to hair production. This form of cell 'death', or cornification, requires cellular organelle removal to allow the cytoplasm to become packed with keratin filament bundles that further require cross-linking to create a strong hair fibre. Although these processes are well described in epidermal keratinocytes, there is a lack of understanding of such mechanisms, specifically in the hair follicle.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Adamson's fringe is the upper area of the hair follicle where the hair shaft becomes hard and completely keratinized, marking the transition from the inner root sheath to the stem of the follicle.
  • In cases of Tinea capitis, a fungal infection, the fungi are limited to this fringe area and do not penetrate deeper into the hair follicle bulb.
  • The article discusses Adamson's original findings from 1895, his biography, and how Kligman's later experiments supported and expanded on the concept of Adamson's fringe and its role in understanding Tinea capitis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

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