Fungal nail disease: a guide to good practice (report of a Working Group of the British Society for Medical Mycology)

scientific article

Fungal nail disease: a guide to good practice (report of a Working Group of the British Society for Medical Mycology) is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814
review articleQ7318358

External links are
P356DOI10.1136/BMJ.311.7015.1277
P3181OpenCitations bibliographic resource ID4383729
P932PMC publication ID2551187
P698PubMed publication ID7496239
P5875ResearchGate publication ID15703342

P2093author name stringC C Kibbler
D W Denning
E G Evans
M M Roberts
R E Warren
D W Warnock
T R Rogers
M D Richardson
P2860cites workTerbinafine in onychomycosis with involvement by non-dermatophytic fungiQ34341344
Fungal infections of the nailQ37699182
The epidemiology of onychomycosis in BritainQ40470751
Studies in the epidemiology of tinea pedis. 8. Fungal infection in a long-stay hospital.Q53860608
Studies in the epidemiology of tinea pedis. I. Tinea pedis in school children.Q55364986
Chronic paronychia and psoriasisQ67322469
Clinical and mycological diagnostic aspects of onychomycoses and dermatomycosesQ67598980
Amorolfine in the treatment of onychomycoses and dermatomycoses (an overview)Q67598994
Antidiarrhoeal drugs for acute diarrhoea in childrenQ67741687
Prevalence of dermatophyte onychomycosis in the United Kingdom: results of an omnibus surveyQ68053488
Fungi in nailsQ68379408
Foot infections in swimming bathsQ69559425
OnychomycosisQ70041351
The treatment of fungus and yeast infections of nails by the method of "chemical removal'Q70425181
Psoriasis of the nail. A clinical-pathologic studyQ72378845
Mycological and Clinical Evaluation of Griseofulvin for Chronic OnychomycosisQ84951192
P433issue7015
P407language of work or nameEnglishQ1860
P921main subjectmycologyQ7175
nail diseaseQ2084035
P304page(s)1277-81
P577publication date1995-11-11
P1433published inThe BMJQ546003
P1476titleFungal nail disease: a guide to good practice (report of a Working Group of the British Society for Medical Mycology)
P478volume311

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q44766415A case of dystrophic fingernail
Q40445554A comparative study of three extraction protocols of DNA from nails: Potential use in the diagnosis of onychomycoses
Q41765987A rare case of onychomycosis in all 10 fingers of an immunocompetent patient
Q33824841A risk-benefit assessment of the newer oral antifungal agents used to treat onychomycosis
Q41718745Current issues in onychomycosis
Q37071384Dermatology within the UK podiatric literature: a content analysis (1989-2010).
Q77879086Diagnosis of onychomycosis made simple
Q41875222Evaluation of pan-dermatophyte nested PCR in diagnosis of onychomycosis.
Q43793917Fungal infection of the diabetic foot: two distinct syndromes
Q37367663Growing Incidence of Non-Dermatophyte Onychomycosis in Tehran, Iran.
Q45923828In vitro susceptibility of nondermatophyte molds isolated from onycomycosis to antifungal drugs.
Q35093386Inappropriate use of oral terbinafine in family practice
Q41032451Itraconazole. A reappraisal of its pharmacological properties and therapeutic use in the management of superficial fungal infections
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Q44401388Onychomycosis and the Diagnostic Significance of Nail Biopsy
Q44704443Pharmacoeconomic analysis of oral therapies for onychomycosis: a US model
Q33431473Rapid detection of dermatophytes from skin and hair
Q34787956Review of antifungal therapy, part II: treatment rationale, including specific patient populations
Q35207143Risk factors for candida infection of the genital tract in the tropics
Q38013193Terbinafine in the treatment of dermatophyte toenail onychomycosis: a meta-analysis of efficacy for continuous and intermittent regimens
Q28370491Terbinafine. An update of its use in superficial mycoses
Q33775734The new oral antifungal agents for onychomycosis of the toenails
Q51590342Trichoderma spp. antagonism to the dermatophyte Trichophyton rubrum: implications in treatment of onychomycosis.
Q34458634Which antifungal agent for onychomycosis? A pharmacoeconomic analysis
Q38991597Yeasts of the genus Candida are the dominant cause of onychomycosis in Libyan women but not men: results of a 2-year surveillance study.
Q54341845[Fungal nail infections - an update. Part 2 - From the causative agent to diagnosis - conventional and molecular procedures].

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