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Female Passion Strips
Female Passion Strips   line   Just 1.23$
Female Passion Strips gives more sensitivity and more pleasures during sexual intercourse... Preparation Dose: 28 strips 2 cassettes ...                

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Preparation Dose:

Female Passion Strips 28 strips

2 cassettes 28 strips
4 cassettes 28 strips
6 cassettes 28 strips
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Most popular medical Questions

What is the therapeutic approach to acne?
Acne therapies, including comedolytics, antibacterial agents, and hormonal modulators, target various factors involved in the pathogenesis of acne. Topical agents including erythromycin, clindamycin, erythromycin-benzoyl peroxide, clindamycin-benzoyl peroxide, benzoyl peroxide, and azelaic acid reduce the population of Propionibacterium acnes. Systemic antibiotics (e.g., tetracycline and its derivatives) are most frequently used for moderate-to-severe papulopustular acne. The topical retinoid tretinoin (Retin-A, Avita) is comedolytic and prevents the formation of new keratin plugs. The systemic retinoid isotretinoin (Accutane) is used in cases of severe acne vulgaris. The exact mechanism of action of isotretinoin is not known but appears to be related to the inhibition of sebaceous gland activity. Other agents used in severe acne include intralesional corticosteroids. Hormonal modulation is most commonly accomplished with oral contraceptive pills, although antiandrogenic agents (e.g., spironolactone) have been used in teenage females with premenstrual flares, hirsutism, and male-pattern alopecia.

What is the natural history of molluscum contagiosum?
Molluscum contagiosum is a common skin infection caused by a poxvirus. Lesions are small pinkish-tan, dome-shaped papules that often have a dimpled or umbilicated center. They are usually asymptomatic, but they may associated with an eczematous dermatitis and itch. Superinfection may complicate the course, require antibiotic therapy, and increase the likelihood of scarring after resolution. In healthy children, the course is self-limited but may last for 2 years. In some cases, persistent and widespread molluscum may require screening for congenital or acquired immunodeficiencies.

What is the best way to eradicate molluscum contagiosum?
If watchful waiting is not desired, therapeutic options are primarily destructive methods. Curettage (with core removal), cryotherapy, and peeling agents (salicylic and lactic acid preparations) can be used. An increasingly popular method is the use of cantharidin, a blistering agent, which is applied in the physician's office to individual lesions.

Describe the characteristic clinical picture of erythema nodosum.
A prodrome of fever, chills, malaise, and arthralgia may precede the typical skin findings. Crops of red to blue tender nodules appear over the anterior shins. Lesions may be seen on the knees, ankles, thighs, and, occasionally, the lower extensor forearms and face. They may evolve through a spectrum of colors that resemble a bruise. Often the changes are misdiagnosed as cellulitis or secondary to a traumatic event. This condition is associated with a variety of infectious (e.g., group A beta hemolytic streptococcus, tuberculosis) and noninfectious (e.g., ulcerative colitis, leukemia) causes.

How can common warts be treated?
The mode of therapy depends on the type and number of warts, the location on the body, and the age of the patient. No matter what treatment is used, warts can always recur; there are no absolute cures. The major goal is to remove warts without residual scarring. Of course, another option is no treatment at all because many warts self-resolve, but they may take years to do so. Therapies include liquid nitrogen (topical), topical tretinoin cream, cantharidin (if not facial), salicylic acid preparations, duct tape application, curettage, and electrodesiccation.
Other treatment modalities, including pulsed dye laser, topical imiquimod, and contact immunotherapy, have been used to treat recalcitrant warts in children. In some case reports, oral cimetidine has been effective, perhaps due to its immunomodulatory activity. Little data exists regarding the relative efficacy of many treatments of warts in children.

What condition is classically diagnosed by the Darier sign?
Mastocytoma. This is a benign lesion composed of mast cells that arises at birth or during early infancy. It appears as a pink/tan plaque or nodule, often with a peau d'orange surface. Darier sign refers to the eliciting of erythema and an urticarial wheal by stroking or rubbing the lesion. The skin changes are caused by the release of histamine from the mechanically traumatized mast cells.



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