Abstract
This chapter is complementary to Chapter 4 published in the same series. Airborne contact dermatitis (ABCD) is considered a prototype in the field of environmental dermatology. It is often underestimated in most textbooks of general dermatology, despite its frequent occurrence in daily life. ABCD may be irritant, allergic, phototoxic, or photoallergic. Airborne contact urticaria is another example. A particular clinical aspect is the “head and neck dermatitis”, which occurs in atopic adult patients. Occupational ABCD represents a most difficult issue in terms of diagnostic procedures. It is obvious that non-occupational ABCD cases involve similar problems, usually easier to solve, and our comments refer to both conditions. Two examples of potentially airborne skin infections (e.g., anthrax and Ebola virus hemorrhagic fever) are also described because they are closely related to the same problematics. A new example of airborne irritant contact dermatitis, not reported so far, is linked with the use of continuous airway pressure in the treatment of obstructive sleep apnea.
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©2014 by De Gruyter
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Frontmatter
- Editorial
- Skin and the environment
- Biology of percutaneous penetration
- Sampling the stratum corneum for toxic chemicals
- Textile allergic contact dermatitis: current status
- Percutaneous absorption from soil
- Percutaneous absorption of water in skin: a review
- The influence of vapor pressure of chemicals on dermal penetration
- Allergic contact dermatitis: clinical aspects
- Irritant contact dermatitis
- Contact urticaria and the environment
- Cutaneous irritancy of water
- Environmental airborne contact dermatoses
- Photoallergy
- UV light and skin aging
- Non-melanoma skin cancer: occupational risk from UV light and arsenic exposure
- Skin cancer: role of ultraviolet radiation in carcinogenesis
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Frontmatter
- Editorial
- Skin and the environment
- Biology of percutaneous penetration
- Sampling the stratum corneum for toxic chemicals
- Textile allergic contact dermatitis: current status
- Percutaneous absorption from soil
- Percutaneous absorption of water in skin: a review
- The influence of vapor pressure of chemicals on dermal penetration
- Allergic contact dermatitis: clinical aspects
- Irritant contact dermatitis
- Contact urticaria and the environment
- Cutaneous irritancy of water
- Environmental airborne contact dermatoses
- Photoallergy
- UV light and skin aging
- Non-melanoma skin cancer: occupational risk from UV light and arsenic exposure
- Skin cancer: role of ultraviolet radiation in carcinogenesis