Unbound MEDLINE

[Clinical signs of cutaneous aging] Revue française de gynécologie et d'obstétrique. [Rev Fr Gynecol Obstet] Journal article

 
Title[Clinical signs of cutaneous aging]
Author(s)Beylot C 
InstitutionService de Dermatologie, Hôpital du Haut-Lévêque, Pessac.
SourceRev Fr Gynecol Obstet 1991 Jun; 86(6):433-41.
MeSHAged
Elasticity
English Abstract
Estrogens
Female
Humans
Male
Menopause
Risk Factors
Skin
Skin Aging
Skin Diseases
Skin Neoplasms
Smoking
Terminology
Ultraviolet Rays
AbstractSkin ageing depends on several, closely connected causes, including ageing obviously, but also on environmental factors, such as smoking and also, in women, on estrogen deficiency due to the menopause, but above all exposure to sunlight, particularly in fair-skinned individuals. The changes due to time-related ageing, thinner, withered skin are similar to those caused by the menopause, which also induces some signs of hyperandrogeny. Sun-related changes, which occur mainly on uncovered areas, vary so widely that some authorities prefer the terms "dermato-heliosis" or "helio-dermatitis" to that of solar ageing. Solar elastosis is the most typical change and is visible on the face as a yellowish skin criss-crossed by deep wrinkles. On the neck and extended surfaces of the limbs, the skin is atrophied and often dyschromic. Excessive exposure to the sun is also responsible for most skin cancers, which are known to occur mainly on exposed parts.
Languagefre
Pub Type(s)Journal Article
Review
PubMed ID1891671
  
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