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1 ctivity in melanocyte cultures, resulting in depigmentation.
2 erall survival, in the absence of autoimmune depigmentation.
3 and is frequently accompanied by autoimmune depigmentation.
4 educed pigment deposition in melanocytes and depigmentation.
5 umor immunity and autoimmunity manifested as depigmentation.
6 mmunity were observed, characterized by coat depigmentation.
7 the incidence of retinal pigment epithelial depigmentation.
8 epidermis, melanocytes, leading to areas of depigmentation.
9 treatment significantly limited the rate of depigmentation.
10 zed by a lack of melanin and consequent skin depigmentation.
11 active CD8(+) T cells and prevents epidermal depigmentation.
12 chronic autoimmune disease that causes skin depigmentation.
13 se characterized by melanocyte loss and skin depigmentation.
14 disease of the skin characterized by patchy depigmentation.
15 ived oral antibiotics and were monitored for depigmentation.
16 the lack of an assessment method for active depigmentation.
17 oss of epidermal melanocytes and progressive depigmentation.
18 pigmentation with varying amounts of central depigmentation.
19 ntigen-specific T cells, resulting in patchy depigmentation.
20 cells and spontaneously developed autoimmune depigmentation.
21 ina that progresses to panretinal patches of depigmentation.
22 erse events were diarrhea, fatigue, and hair depigmentation.
23 lative efficacy of these agents in mediating depigmentation.
24 ed protein 2-derived peptide correlated with depigmentation.
25 econd, unknown locus that causes progressive depigmentation.
26 spotting but show no evidence of progressive depigmentation.
27 ype of HPS with minimal cutaneous and ocular depigmentation.
28 ently experience stress to the skin prior to depigmentation.
29 ]), generalized pigment dilution and/or hair depigmentation (18 [44%]), xerosis (8 [20%]), scrotal er
30 rtial or complete retinal pigment epithelial depigmentation; (2) round shape; (3) sharp margins; and
31 3.34, 20.08) for retinal pigment epithelium depigmentation, 3.59 (95% CI: 1.71, 7.57) for increased
32 en (51.7%), retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) depigmentation (34.9%), RPE hyperpigmentation (branching
36 al deletion of Adar1 in mice leads to global depigmentation and absence of myelin from peripheral ner
39 s investigation might be of relevance to the depigmentation and degeneration of neuromelanin-pigmente
40 hogenic Cx31, but not wild-type Cx31, causes depigmentation and degeneration of ommatidia that are re
41 ondition is characterized by bilateral acute depigmentation and discoloration of the iris stroma, pig
42 e against TRP-2 peptide, inducing autoimmune depigmentation and further decreasing lung tumor nodules
43 twork predictions on the 4-step scale, while depigmentation and geographic atrophy (GA) areas correla
44 e-transgenic mice developed spontaneous hair depigmentation and had visual defects that progressed wi
45 tion with v-Ha-ras or Ela was accompanied by depigmentation and led to complete loss of msg1 expressi
47 eins (TRP) 1 and TRP-2, we observed striking depigmentation and melanocyte destruction only in the sk
50 ne the cumulative incidence of vitiligo-like depigmentation and the prognostic value of vitiligo deve
51 ng an injection at an outside hospital, iris depigmentation and thinning, iris recession with retinal
52 arnet (Er:YAG) laser techniques for gingival depigmentation and to evaluate their effect on histologi
53 nocytes leads to autonomous growth in vitro, depigmentation, and in the case of the oncogenes, tumori
54 and globules, tan color, irregularly shaped depigmentation, and irregularly distributed and sized do
56 such as rickets, abdominal distention, hair depigmentation, and skin lesions and with a maternal his
57 inning, discrete hyperreflective foci, focal depigmentation, and the presence of suprachoroidal hypor
58 ly, porphyrin biosynthesis and light-induced depigmentation are enhanced by starvation, recapitulatin
59 pigment epitelium, defects/pigment mottling, depigmentation area, subretinal haemorrhage, subretinal
60 5% of MT/ret mice develop a vitiligo, a skin depigmentation attributable to the lysis of normal melan
61 l examination or fundus photography, such as depigmentation, bone-spicule pigmentation, vascular tort
62 ing mouse models of vitiligo consist of hair depigmentation but lack prominent epidermal involvement,
66 or older who had nonsegmental vitiligo with depigmentation covering 10% or less of total body-surfac
67 capacity to migrate to the skin and suppress depigmentation, despite normal systemic numbers in the s
70 as been shown in vivo that patients with the depigmentation disorder vitiligo accumulate hydrogen per
74 immune disorder characterized by progressive depigmentation due to melanocyte destruction by cytotoxi
75 o, and active-specific immunotherapy-induced depigmentation had significant anti-TRP-2 IgG titers.
76 een known for several decades that cutaneous depigmentation, i.e., contact/occupational vitiligo, can
79 egional magnetic resonance (MR) quantifiable depigmentation in association with PD severity and (b) t
80 herapy also induced tumor rejection and skin depigmentation in B cell-deficient and in CD4(+) T cell-
83 that simvastatin both prevented and reversed depigmentation in our mouse model of vitiligo, and reduc
87 om Bsubtilis interfered with T-cell-mediated depigmentation in the h3TA2 mouse model of vitiligo, sug
89 f the 14 known missense mutations that cause depigmentation in these species map to the tyrosine kina
90 that the coexistence of parkinsonism and SN depigmentation in this birth cohort may have resulted fr
91 ocol significantly increased and accelerated depigmentation in this model, accompanied by the inducti
93 , size, and type; retinal pigment epithelium depigmentation; increased pigment; geographic atrophy; a
95 aking with three primary objectives: halting depigmentation, initiating repigmentation and sustaining
96 donetwork, multiple blue-gray dots, scarlike depigmentation, irregularly distributed and sized brown
99 ution of the microbiome in FH mice, in which depigmentation is mediated by tyrosinase-reactive T cell
100 Identification of new compounds to reverse depigmentation is therefore a pressing need for this dis
101 , occurring in a kindred with more extensive depigmentation, is a novel four-base insertion in exon 2
102 retinal pigment, retinal pigment epithelial depigmentation, neovascular lesions, and geographic atro
103 retinal pigment, retinal pigment epithelial depigmentation, neovascular lesions, and geographic atro
106 iameter with drusen area >/=196350 mum2) and depigmentation of retinal pigment epithelium (slope of -
107 ch the presence of bilateral soft drusen and depigmentation of retinal pigment epithelium was associa
108 by melanocyte loss, which results in patchy depigmentation of skin and hair, and is associated with
109 autoimmune disease in which acquired patchy depigmentation of skin, hair, and mucous membranes resul
111 ratinocyte-melanocyte contact and results in depigmentation of the dark skinned Yucatan swine, sugges
112 sease of the skin causing disfiguring patchy depigmentation of the epidermis and, less commonly, hair
116 ed marked hypopigmentation of both fundi and depigmentation of the regressed tumour in left eye.
118 the progressive fundus hypopigmentation and depigmentation of the tumour remnants first appeared aft
120 no reduction in the severity or kinetics of depigmentation or long-lived protection against melanoma
121 5.6); presence of retinal pigment epithelial depigmentation (OR, 9.0; 95% CI, 4.1-19.8); or hyperpigm
125 use model (Txnrd1(mel-/-)), which exhibits a depigmentation phenotype consisting of variable amelanot
126 gaging anti-CD25 antibody fully restored the depigmentation phenotype in h3TA2-IFN-gamma(-/-) mice, m
127 ne condition vitiligo, characterized by skin depigmentation, presents challenges for effective treatm
131 go (GV) is a complex disease in which patchy depigmentation results from autoimmune loss of melanocyt
132 combination treatment, 56% (38/68) developed depigmentation, starting at the site of vaccination or c
133 d kindred characterized by unusually limited depigmentation, substitutes a threonine for an alanine a
134 body prevents CD8(+) T-cell accumulation and depigmentation, suggesting a therapeutic potential for t
135 peripheral nerve remyelination and focal fur depigmentation; surviving weak mice had persistent expre
138 TRP) 1, are relevant to both autoimmune skin depigmentation (vitiligo) and tumor immunity, because th
141 of Treg abundance in preventing progressive depigmentation was evaluated by adoptively transferring
146 ciated with retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) depigmentation, was followed by disorganization and furt
148 Qualitative indices of substantia nigra (SN) depigmentation were verified in a subset of 40 randomly
149 ulating S100B levels in patients with active depigmentation which were strongly correlated with the e
150 ing offers a fully reversible model for hair depigmentation, which might be used for the studies of h
153 in which melanocyte destruction causes skin depigmentation, with 49 loci known from previous GWAS.
154 is characterized by acute bilateral stromal depigmentation, without other pathologic ocular findings
155 nknown origin, is the most frequent cause of depigmentation worldwide, with an estimated prevalence o