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1

Trindade, Felicidade, Teresa Fiadeiro, Antonio Torrelo, Hans Christian Hennies, Ingrid Hausser, and Heiko Traupe. "Bathing suit ichthyosis." European Journal of Dermatology 20, no. 4 (July 2010): 447–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1684/ejd.2010.1008.

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Srinivas, SahanaM, Rachana Shekar, and Ravi Hiremagalore. "Bathing suit ichthyosis." Indian Journal of Paediatric Dermatology 19, no. 4 (2018): 344. http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/ijpd.ijpd_135_17.

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Zaouak, Anissa, and Cherine Charfeddine. "Bathing Suit Ichthyosis." Indian Pediatrics 61, no. 4 (February 26, 2024): 397. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13312-024-3175-3.

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Hoppa, Eric C., and James F. Wiley. "Bathing Suit Mesh Entrapment." Pediatric Emergency Care 22, no. 12 (December 2006): 813–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/01.pec.0000238745.81358.75.

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5

Gaskill, Ky. "Boundaries Beyond the Bathing Suit." Journal of Consent-Based Performance 3, no. 1 (May 16, 2024): 23–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.46787/jcbp.v3i1.3909.

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A literature review and analysis evaluating how the practices of Intimacy Choreography support the aims of one of the Catholic Church's sexual abuse prevention programs collectively called VIRTUS. This article defines scenarios of legally unacceptable risk (high stakes) as well as legally acceptance risk (low stakes) and how the tools of Intimacy Choreography (Theatrical Intimacy Education, in particular) and VIRTUS both aim to establish and uphold boundaries, but in different capacities. This article compares the tools of each area, and makes an argument for how Intimacy Choreography's consent-based practices are a good for Catholic diocesan schools' theatre programs that utilize VIRTUS training.
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Sathishkumar, Dharshini, Dincy Peter, Susanne Pulimood, Henning Wiegmann, Frederic Valentin, Meera Thomas, Hans Christian Hennies, and Vinzenz Oji. "Bathing Suit Variant of Autosomal Recessive Congenital Ichthyosis (ARCI) in Two Indian Patients." Case Reports in Dermatological Medicine 2018 (December 30, 2018): 1–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2018/3140473.

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Bathing suit ichthyosis (BSI) is a rare variant of autosomal recessive congenital ichthyosis (ARCI) due to transglutaminase-1 gene (TGM1) mutations leading to a temperature sensitive phenotype. It is characterized by dark-grey or brownish scaling restricted to the “bathing suit” areas. We report two Indian girls with bathing suit ichthyosis and mutations in TGM1 (patient 1: homozygous for c.1147G>A; patient 2: compound heterozygous for c.832G>A, c.919C>G).
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7

Marukian, Nareh V., Rong-Hua Hu, Brittany G. Craiglow, Leonard M. Milstone, Jing Zhou, Amy Theos, Hande Kaymakcalan, et al. "Expanding the Genotypic Spectrum of Bathing Suit Ichthyosis." JAMA Dermatology 153, no. 6 (June 1, 2017): 537. http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamadermatol.2017.0202.

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8

SLAVINSKA, Alla, Serhii MATIUKH, and Viktoriia MYTSA. "DIFFERENTIAL METHOD OF QUALITY CONTROL OF PHYSICO-MECHANICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF KNITTED FABRIC FOR BATHING SUIT." Herald of Khmelnytskyi National University. Technical sciences 309, no. 3 (May 26, 2022): 199–204. http://dx.doi.org/10.31891/2307-5732-2022-309-3-199-204.

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In order to ensure compliance of knitted fabrics to the established requirements of bathing suits, technical regulation of quality is considered. The normative regulation of technical control of knitted fabrics for the production of bathing suits is carried out. The option of normative documentation of examination of knitted fabrics for bathing suits is presented by a set of standards. The standards of the «Product Quality Indicators System» complex establish the nomenclature of mandatory and recommended indicators for assessing the level of product quality in various light industry industries. The choice of measurement methods and processing of measurement results is regulated by DSTU 2681-94. Analytically substantiated nomenclature of quality indicators by level of application: mandatory, additional, recommended. The differential method of estimating the quality of a knitted fabric has been experimentally tested. The selection of quality indicators for testing samples of knitted fabric is made taking into account the purpose and conditions of use of the product, analysis of consumer requirements and additional and recommended requirements. The differential method in the examination of group quality indicators is carried out by comparing the individual quality indicators of the evaluated canvas with the basic indicators of homogeneous products by purpose. The object of the research is knitted fabrics for bathing suits, made by double weaving of double-elastic bands (interlock) on two-font interlock circular knitting machines type I2108-28 of the Terrot class. According to the results of the experimental study of the recommended nomenclature of physical and mechanical quality indicators, the compliance of the knitted fabric of raw materials PE + PA with the requirements of the Standard for the manufacture of bathing suits was confirmed. The influence of classification features of knitted fabric on the variation of discontinuous elongation in the assessment of the elasticity of the material by quality indices is confirmed.
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9

Shetty, Shricharith, and SathishB Pai. "Guidelines for bath PUVA, bathing suit PUVA and soak PUVA." Indian Journal of Dermatology, Venereology, and Leprology 81, no. 6 (2015): 559. http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/0378-6323.168336.

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10

Benmously-Mlika, Rym, Anissa Zaouak, Ridha Mrad, Nadia Laaroussi, Sonia Abdelhak, Alain Hovnanian, and Insaf Mokhtar. "Bathing suit ichthyosis caused by aTGM1mutation in a Tunisian child." International Journal of Dermatology 53, no. 12 (September 10, 2014): 1478–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ijd.12569.

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11

Yamamoto, M., Y. Sakaguchi, M. Itoh, N. Nakagawa, A. Fukunaga, K. Hitomi, and K. Yamanishi. "Bathing suit ichthyosis with summer exacerbation: a temperature-sensitive case." British Journal of Dermatology 166, no. 3 (December 6, 2011): 672–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2133.2011.10594.x.

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12

Marukian, N., J. Zhou, R. Hu, A. Theos, H. Kaymakcalan, S. Bayliss, A. S. Paller, L. Boyden, and K. Choate. "366 Bathing suit ichthyosis: Novel mutations and clues to pathogenesis." Journal of Investigative Dermatology 136, no. 5 (May 2016): S65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jid.2016.02.399.

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13

Krishnan, Arvind, Barrett McCormick, Hubert Swana, and Mark Rich. "Acute Foreskin Strangulation Injury due to Bathing Suit Mesh Entrapment." Urology Case Reports 13 (July 2017): 85–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eucr.2016.05.009.

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14

RIABCHYKOV, Mykola, Liudmyla NAZARCHUK, Viktoriia STYTSIUK, Oksana TKACHUK, and Oksana KAHAN. "DIFFERENTIAL METHOD OF QUALITY CONTROL OF PHYSICO-MECHANICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF KNITTED FABRIC FOR BATHING SUIT." Herald of Khmelnytskyi National University. Technical sciences 311, no. 4 (August 2022): 220–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.31891/2307-5732-2022-311-4-220-226.

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The actuality of the introduction of textile materials with the content of nanopowders based on oxides of divalent and trivalent iron has been proven. The main directions of implementation of such materials into real practical results are shown. The algorithm for the synthesis of magnetic nanomaterials was developed. Adhesion properties of magnetic nanopowders to textile fibers are determined. It is shown that exposure for 5 – 7 days ensures almost absolute adhesive resistance and provides a combination of textile properties with magnetic nanopowders. Bacteriostatic properties of nanomagnetic textile materials were determined. For this purpose, the growth dynamics of mold fungi was determined. It is shown that the content of nanomagnetite significantly suppresses the growth of mold infections. The magnetic properties of textile materials are described, the possibilities of their introduction into elements of smart clothing, medical and protective materials are determined. Magnetic technologies in medicine, compression elements of clothing can be provided with the help of magnetic textile materials. The magnetic effects of such materials make it possible to create elements of clothing with a change in geometry. This determines the possibility of using such materials for smart clothes with new effects. The possibilities of creating magnetic nanomaterials with given structural characteristics have been proven. The addition of nanopowders reduces the size dispersion of structural elements, reduces their size, and increases density. This effect allows ensuring the specified transfer characteristics of textile materials, which provide the necessary parameters of heat transfer and mass transfer. The possibilities of using magnetic textile materials against electromagnetic radiation are shown. The structure of directions for the use of magnetic textile materials for medical and protective products, as well as for promising elements of smart clothing, has been developed.
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15

Saha, Sushobhan, and Chander Grover. "Collodion baby to bathing suit ichthyosis: A 6-year follow-up." Indian Dermatology Online Journal 13, no. 6 (2022): 800. http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/idoj.idoj_79_22.

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16

Aufenvenne, Karin, Vinzenz Oji, Tatjana Walker, Christoph Becker-Pauly, Hans Christian Hennies, Walter Stöcker, and Heiko Traupe. "Transglutaminase-1 and Bathing Suit Ichthyosis: Molecular Analysis of Gene/Environment Interactions." Journal of Investigative Dermatology 129, no. 8 (August 2009): 2068–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/jid.2009.18.

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17

Li, Wendy, Kate E. Oberlin, Theodore E. Wilson, and Anita N. Haggstrom. "Bathing suit ichthyosis: Two Burmese siblings and a review of the literature." Pediatric Dermatology 37, no. 1 (October 20, 2019): 165–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/pde.14030.

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18

Mir-Bonafé, J. F., E. Baselga-Torres, E. Roé-Crespo, and L. Puig-Sanz. "Prenatal Screening for Bathing-suit Ichthyosis After Diagnosis in an Older Sibling." Actas Dermo-Sifiliográficas (English Edition) 106, no. 9 (November 2015): 770–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.adengl.2015.09.013.

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19

Bourrat, Emmanuelle, Claudine Blanchet-Bardon, Celine Derbois, Susan Cure, and Judith Fischer. "Specific TGM1 Mutation Profiles in Bathing Suit and Self-Improving Collodion Ichthyoses." Archives of Dermatology 148, no. 10 (October 1, 2012): 1191. http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/archdermatol.2012.1947.

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20

PAI, SATHISH, and CHAKRAVARTHI R. SRINIVAS. "BATHING SUIT DELIVERY OF 8-METHOXYPSORALEN FOR PSORIASIS: A DOUBLE-BLIND, PLACEBO-CONTROLLED STUDY." International Journal of Dermatology 33, no. 8 (August 1994): 576–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-4362.1994.tb02901.x.

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21

Mohanty, Partha Pratim, Rajesh Pasricha, Archana Gupta, Manoj Jain, and Niloy Ranjan Datta. "Malignant melanoma of pleura in a patient with giant congenital ?bathing suit? hairy nevus." International Journal of Clinical Oncology 9, no. 5 (October 2004): 410–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10147-004-0427-z.

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22

Oji, Vinzenz, Juliette Mazereeuw Hautier, Bijan Ahvazi, Ingrid Hausser, Karin Aufenvenne, Tatjana Walker, Natalia Seller, et al. "Bathing suit ichthyosis is caused by transglutaminase-1 deficiency: evidence for a temperature-sensitive phenotype." Human Molecular Genetics 15, no. 21 (September 12, 2006): 3083–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/hmg/ddl249.

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23

Tucker, Aaren. "It’s the End of the World and I’m in My Bathing Suit by Justin A. Reynolds." Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books 75, no. 7 (2022): 228. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/bcc.2022.0136.

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24

Moor, Mihalova C. C. "T NOVER MUTATION IN HMBS GENE PRESENTING WITH ‘BATHING SUIT’ SENSORY IMPAIRMENT AND RECURRENT NEUROLOGICAL DEFICIT." Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry 83, Suppl 2 (November 2012): A41.1—A41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/jnnp-2012-304200a.150.

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25

Perlman, Sally E., S. Paige Hertweck, and Walter M. Wolfe. "Water-Ski Douche Injury in a Premenarcheal Female." Pediatrics 96, no. 4 (October 1, 1995): 782–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.1542/peds.96.4.782.

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In the last 15 years, seven cases of deep vaginal lacerations after the so-called water-skiing douche have been reported.1-4 We report the first such case in the premenarcheal girl. CASE REPORT A 9-year-old girl, Tanner stage 2, in otherwise excellent health, was transferred to Kosair Children's Hospital (Louisville, KY) after falling while water skiing and sustaining an injury producing persistent vaginal bleeding. This young girl was on her fifth trial of being up on water skis. She was wearing a single-layer, one-piece cloth bathing suit. The boat was traveling approximately 40 to 50 mph. She never was able to reach a full standing position.
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26

Washio, K., A. Fukunaga, M. Terai, K. Hitomi, K. Yamanishi, and C. Nishigori. "Hypohidrosis Plays a Crucial Role in the Vicious Circle of Bathing Suit Ichthyosis: A Case with Summer Exacerbation." Acta Dermato Venereologica 94, no. 3 (2014): 349–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.2340/00015555-1739.

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27

Hackett, B. C., D. Fitzgerald, R. M. Watson, F. A. Hol, and A. D. Irvine. "Genotype-phenotype correlations with TGM1 : clustering of mutations in the bathing suit ichthyosis and self-healing collodion baby variants of lamellar ichthyosis." British Journal of Dermatology 162, no. 2 (October 26, 2009): 448–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2133.2009.09537.x.

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28

Arita, Ken, Witold K. Jacyk, Vesarat Wessagowit, Elizabeth Jansen van Rensburg, Tracy Chaplin, Charles A. Mein, Masashi Akiyama, Hiroshi Shimizu, Rudolf Happle, and John A. McGrath. "The South African “Bathing Suit Ichthyosis” Is a Form of Lamellar Ichthyosis Caused by a Homozygous Missense Mutation, p.R315L, in Transglutaminase 1." Journal of Investigative Dermatology 127, no. 2 (February 2007): 490–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/sj.jid.5700550.

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29

Ødum, August-Witte Feentved, and Carsten Geisler. "Vitamin D in Cutaneous T-Cell Lymphoma." Cells 13, no. 6 (March 13, 2024): 503. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells13060503.

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Cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (CTCL) is characterized by the proliferation of malignant T cells in inflamed skin lesions. Mycosis fungoides (MF)—the most common variant of CTCL—often presents with skin lesions around the abdomen and buttocks (“bathing suit” distribution), i.e., in skin areas devoid of sun-induced vitamin D. For decades, sunlight and vitamin D have been connected to CTCL. Thus, vitamin D induces apoptosis and inhibits the expression of cytokines in malignant T cells. Furthermore, CTCL patients often display vitamin D deficiency, whereas phototherapy induces vitamin D and has beneficial effects in CTCL, suggesting that light and vitamin D have beneficial/protective effects in CTCL. Inversely, vitamin D promotes T helper 2 (Th2) cell specific cytokine production, regulatory T cells, tolerogenic dendritic cells, as well as the expression of immune checkpoint molecules, all of which may have disease-promoting effects by stimulating malignant T-cell proliferation and inhibiting anticancer immunity. Studies on vitamin D treatment in CTCL patients showed conflicting results. Some studies found positive effects, others negative effects, while the largest study showed no apparent clinical effect. Taken together, vitamin D may have both pro- and anticancer effects in CTCL. The balance between the opposing effects of vitamin D in CTCL is likely influenced by treatment and may change during the disease course. Therefore, it remains to be discovered whether and how the effect of vitamin D can be tilted toward an anticancer response in CTCL.
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Plakhova, A. A., and I. D. Samsonova. "Hidden reserves of the Vasyugan swamps for the production of beekeeping products." Bulletin of NSAU (Novosibirsk State Agrarian University), no. 3 (October 12, 2022): 118–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.31677/2072-6724-2022-64-3-118-124.

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In recent years, the demand for organic products has increased on the world market, including environmentally friendly and healthy beekeeping bioproducts. Organic beekeeping currently exists in 60 countries around the world. In our country, there are vast territories for creating apiaries of a new topical direction. These territories are located north of the Trans-Siberian Railway from the right bank of the Irtysh to the left bank of the Ob - these are the Vasyugan swamps. Administratively, Vasyuganye unites the Omsk, Tomsk, and Novosibirsk regions. This territory is located in the wind rose, where the air masses of cities with industrial gases bypass it. Therefore, bee products collected by bees do not contain harmful elements. At present almost no one lives here and does not engage in agriculture. As a result of a survey of the natural forage base of the Vasyugan swamps, the authors discovered the most important honey plants and perganos. These are common coltsfoot, soft fluffy lungwort, marsh marigold, medicinal dandelion, late dandelion, Asian bathing suit, willows, warty birch, fluffy birch, ivy-like budra, bird cherry, white clover, black currant, yellow acacia, Siberian snakehead, chistets swamp, forest kupyr, mouse peas, thin-leaved peas, meadow geranium, forest geranium, forest raspberry, dissected cow parsnip, forest angelica, common goutweed, wild parsnip, common serpukha, field bodyak. Thus, this area is a rich pasture for bees. The authors recommend sowing wastelands with yellow sweet clover (Melilotus officinalis L.) and white sweet clover (Melilotus albus Medik.) if it is expedient to organize apiaries in Vasyuganye. This area will always be well visited by bees and provide honey collection from 5 to 10 kg per day for several years.
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31

Wingfield, Nancy M. "The Enemy Within: Regulating Prostitution and Controlling Venereal Disease in Cisleithanian Austria during the Great War." Central European History 46, no. 3 (September 2013): 568–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s000893891300099x.

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During summer 1917, civilians using the city baths in Olmütz, Moravia, demanded that soldiers stationed at the local Emperor Francis Joseph infantry barracks cease swimming nude in the March River opposite the city baths, especially during the women's swimming hour. In addition to those of soldiers, the bathing habits of other culprits offended the good citizens of the city. One resident complained that children, adolescent boys and girls, and even some grown-ups, among them “buxom” prostitutes, were swimming nude in the March and thus offending the morals of others. “Flashers” also caught the attention of the public and the police, including the unknown man who made “immoral,” but unrecorded, remarks and exposed himself to the women who frequented the promenade under the Freundschaftshöhe in the western Bohemian spa town, Karlsbad, during the summer. The offended women provided the police with a good description of this man, said to be between forty-five and fifty years old, of average size, with gray, grizzled hair, a graying mustache, and a goatee. They described his clothing, a dark suit with knee-length pants, knee-high stockings, hiking boots, and a panama hat. (Records do not indicate whether police apprehended the suspect.) In the Bukovinian provincial capital Czernowitz, an eighteen-year-old electrical technician accused a forty-seven-year-old man from Saxony who allegedly propositioned him on the city's Ringplatz one late summer's evening in 1918 of “crimes against nature.” The most common “morals” problem to preoccupy the police and the military during the Great War, however, was neither flashers nor nude bathers; it was prostitution.
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32

Gammie, A. J., and A. P. Wyn-Jones. "Does hepatitis a pose a significant health risk to recreational water users?" Water Science and Technology 35, no. 11-12 (June 1, 1997): 171–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.2166/wst.1997.0729.

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In recent years recreational water use in the UK has increased dramatically and it has been estimated that more than twenty million people use the British coastline annually. In addition, there has been a marked increase in the number of people who use inland water e.g. lakes, reservoirs, rivers and canals. The ready availability of the wet suit has altered the public use of recreational water in several ways in the UK. Longer periods of immersion are now becoming normal with year-round activity now common not just during the accepted bathing season of May-September. Further factors that raise the importance of health implications are the growth of sports which involve intimate contact with water: surfing, windsurfing and boogie boarding. The raised public awareness of environmental issues in general makes health risk assessment a prime concern. Hepatitis A virus infection is transmitted by the faecal-oral route and this study compares two groups of water users, surfers and inland windsurfers. Saliva samples were tested for total antibody to hepatitis A as this indicates the immune status of the individual. All participants completed a questionnaire that elicited concomitant risk factors for previous exposure to hepatitis A. A calculated Odds Ratio of 3.03 and a Chi square of 5.3 with a probability of P = 0.02 was obtained when the non-immunised surfers were compared with the non-immunised windsurfers. This shows a statistical correlation between surfing and exposure to hepatitis A virus. It is recommended that surfers should be offered vaccination in order that they are protected from the risk of acquiring hepatitis A. They should also be given the opportunity to make a considered decision about the risks of acquiring hepatitis A recreationally.
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Hoffmann, Vincent, Lisa Christina Schneider, Norma Mechow, Juliane Weilandt, Sylke Gellrich, Silja Guski, Miriam Kinzel, and Wiebke Ludwig-Peitsch. "Randbetonte erythematöse Plaques bei einem Patienten mit kongenitaler Ichthyose: von häufigen und seltenen Dermatosen." Aktuelle Dermatologie 48, no. 10 (October 2022): 465–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/a-1874-6275.

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ZusammenfassungNicht-syndromale autosomal-rezessive kongenitale Ichthyosen (ARCI) sind seltene hereditäre Verhornungsstörungen mit einem heterogenen Spektrum an Phänotypen von einer nahezu erscheinungsfreien Haut über eine milde bis schwere Erythrodermie bis hin zu Panzer-artigen Schuppen. Zu den Hauptvertretern zählen die lamelläre Ichthyose, die kongenitale ichthyosiforme Erythrodermie, die Harlekin-Ichythose, die „bathing suit ichthyosis“ und die „self-improving congenital ichthyosis“ (SICI), die sich im Laufe des ersten Lebensjahres bessert und im späteren Leben nur noch durch eine Xerosis cutis mit diskreten, feinen weißen Schuppen äußert.Wir berichten über einen 38-jährigen Patienten, der sich mit einer milden kongenitalen Ichthyose unbekannter genetischer Ursache und einem seit einem Monat erheblich verschlechterten Hautbefund vorstellte. Anhand des klinischen Befundes mit anulären, randbetonten, schuppenden erythematösen Plaques, der Histologie und einer Schuppenpilzkultur konnte eine durch Trichophyton rubrum hervorgerufene Tinea corporis als Ursache für die Exazerbation identifiziert werden. Diese heilte nach 4-wöchiger systemischer Therapie mit Terbinafin komplett ab. Zurück blieb nur eine Xerosis cutis mit einer feinen weißen Schuppung. Passend zur klinischen Verdachtsdiagnose einer SICI erbrachte die molekulargenetische Untersuchung zwei mutmaßlich compound-heterozygote, wahrscheinlich pathogene Varianten im ALOXE3-Gen, eine Spleiß-Variante (c.1392+2T>A;p.?) und ein komplexes Rearrangement. ALOXE3 kodiert für die Lipooxygenase E3, die für die epidermale Differenzierung und für den Aufbau des „cornified envelope“ bedeutsam ist. Varianten in diesem Gen sind eine der Hauptursachen für SICI.Patienten mit Ichthyosen weisen aufgrund des verdickten Stratum corneum, einer verzögerten Desquamation, einer gestörten epidermalen Barrierefunktion und einer Störung der Talg- und Schweißproduktion ein erhöhtes Risiko für Dermatophytosen auf. Diese präsentieren sich oft atypisch und können daher leicht verkannt werden. Insbesondere bei schweren kongenitalen Ichthyosen sind chronische Verläufe und Rezidive häufig. Unser Fall zeigt, dass auch und gerade bei Patienten mit seltenen Verhornungsstörungen an häufige infektiöse Dermatosen wie Tinea corporis gedacht werden muss.
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34

Louthan, McIntyre R. "Tubing, Bathing Suits, and Failure Prevention." Journal of Failure Analysis and Prevention 9, no. 6 (October 10, 2009): 493–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11668-009-9298-y.

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35

Lee, Joo-Young, and Hyo Hyum Lee. "Korean Women Divers ‘Haenyeo’: Bathing Suits and Acclimatization to Cold." Journal of the Human-Environment System 17, no. 1 (2014): 001–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.1618/jhes.17.001.

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36

Ferrarin, Christian, Pierluigi Penna, Antonella Penna, Vedrana Spada, Fabio Ricci, Josipa Bilić, Maja Krzelj, et al. "Modelling the Quality of Bathing Waters in the Adriatic Sea." Water 13, no. 11 (May 28, 2021): 1525. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/w13111525.

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The aim of this study is to develop a relocatable modelling system able to describe the microbial contamination that affects the quality of coastal bathing waters. Pollution events are mainly triggered by urban sewer outflows during massive rainy events, with relevant negative consequences on the marine environment and tourism and related activities of coastal towns. A finite element hydrodynamic model was applied to five study areas in the Adriatic Sea, which differ for urban, oceanographic and morphological conditions. With the help of transport-diffusion and microbial decay modules, the distribution of Escherichia coli was investigated during significant events. The numerical investigation was supported by detailed in situ observational datasets. The model results were evaluated against water level, sea temperature, salinity and E. coli concentrations acquired in situ, demonstrating the capacity of the modelling suite in simulating the circulation in the coastal areas of the Adriatic Sea, as well as several main transport and diffusion dynamics, such as riverine and polluted waters dispersion. Moreover, the results of the simulations were used to perform a comparative analysis among the different study sites, demonstrating that dilution and mixing, mostly induced by the tidal action, had a stronger effect on bacteria reduction with respect to microbial decay. Stratification and estuarine dynamics also play an important role in governing microbial concentration. The modelling suite can be used as a beach management tool for improving protection of public health, as required by the EU Bathing Water Directive.
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Cionek, Caroline Apoloni, Catia Nunes, Adonilson Freitas, Natalia Homem, Edvani Muniz, and Teresa Amorim. "Degradation study of polyester fiber in swimming pool water." Textile Research Journal 91, no. 1-2 (June 21, 2020): 51–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0040517520934507.

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The disinfection of swimming pool water is vital to maintain water quality. The chemicals used in this practice can damage the fabrics of bathing suits and shorten the shelf life of the textile substrate. The degradation of polyester, a polymer that is widely used in bathing suits for swimming pools, was investigated. For this, a 23 factorial design was employed for the experimental methodology. The effect of several variables was analyzed in a simulated swimming pool batch, such as textile-exposure time, concentration of the used disinfection product, and batch temperature. The response variables were enthalpy of fusion ΔHm, melting temperature and crystallinity (obtained by differential scanning calorimetry), percentage of weight loss, temperature of maximum rate of weight loss, onset temperature and endset temperature (measured through thermogravimetric analysis), and Young's modulus values (measured in strain-stress tests in the row and column directions). The factors of temperature, time, and the concentration of disinfectant were significant for melting temperature, crystallinity, onset temperature, and Young's modulus for columns. The analyses of variance were obtained using software Design-Expert DX7. Attenuated total reflectance-Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy analysis showed changes in band intensities at 695 cm−1, which were attributed to ester groups, as well as a decrease of the carbonyl band at 1712 cm−1, which was attributed to the hydrolysis of the material. Analysis through scanning electronic microscopy images showed the appearance of stretch marks in the constituent filaments of the tested textiles, which suggests a surface degradation occurred.
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Lee, Yhe-Young, and Jane Farrell-Beck. "Women's Body Exposure in Leisure Wear during the 1930s -Focused on Bathing Suits, Shorts, and Halters-." Journal of the Korean Society of Clothing and Textiles 36, no. 6 (June 30, 2012): 592–600. http://dx.doi.org/10.5850/jksct.2012.36.6.592.

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39

Brandberg, Y., R. Jonell, M. Broberg, PO Sjödén, and I. Rosdahl. "Sun-related behaviour in individuals with dysplastic naevus syndrome." Acta Dermato-Venereologica 76, no. 5 (September 1, 1996): 381–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.2340/0001555576381384.

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In Sweden, individuals with dysplastic naevus syndrome are regularly screened and informed about self-examination and sun-protection at special clinics. This study describes sun-related behaviour in this group. A total of 54/65 consecutive patients with dysplastic naevus syndrome (28 women and 26 men) completed diary recordings of sun-related behaviour during 1 month in 1994. A majority (81%) reported sunbathing with the intention to get a tan, mean number of occasions 9.2, range 1-24 occasions, during the month of recordings. Out of these, 61% reported sunburns, some of them repeatedly up to 7 times. Sunbathing occurred mainly in bathing suits during midday in sunny weather, with a mean duration of 2.5 h per occasion. Such a hazardous behaviour in the sun in a melanoma high risk group is alarming. New models for intervention to support a more sun protective life style in this group of patient have to be elaborated.
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40

Ahmad, Mansoor, Abdul Qayoom Paul, Priyanka Negi, Salim Akhtar, Bibhuti Gogoi, and Ashima Saikia. "Mafic rocks with back-arc E-MORB affinity from the Chotanagpur Granite Gneiss Complex of India: relicts of a Proterozoic Ophiolite suite." Geological Magazine 158, no. 9 (March 18, 2021): 1527–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0016756821000078.

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AbstractThe Proterozoic Chotanagpur Granite Gneiss Complex (CGGC) at the northern boundary of the Central Indian Tectonic Zone (CITZ) of the eastern Indian shield preserves relics of fossilized oceanic back-arc crust. We describe the field, petrographical and geochemical characteristics of the mafic rocks comprising pillow basalts and dolerites from the Bathani area of the northern fringe of the CGGC, eastern India. The basalts consist of plagioclase feldspar, hornblende, opaque minerals (Fe–Ti oxide) and chlorite, and the dolerite consists of plagioclase, hornblende and opaque minerals. Our data indicate that the Bathani mafic rocks have tholeiitic to transitional composition and are overprinted by greenschist facies metamorphic conditions; however, REE and fluid immobile elements preserve their primary geochemical signatures. The (La/Sm)N ratios (1.38–2.15) and chondrite-normalized REE patterns point to an enriched mid-ocean ridge basalt (E-MORB) mantle source. Geochemical characteristics indicate a mixed signature of MORB and arc tholeiite with enrichment of Ba, Th, Eu and Sr, similar to that of back-arc supra-subduction zone ophiolites. These mafic rocks are the product of MORB-like magma derived from a depleted mantle corresponding to < 2% partial melting of spinel lherzolite, enriched by subduction-induced slab metasomatism and melting. The Bathani mafic rocks are representative of the upper part of a supra-subduction zone columnar ophiolite section, which was emplaced onto the present-day northern margin of the CGGC during suturing of the northern and southern Indian block at c. 1.9 Ga during the Nuna amalgamation.
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41

Nabhan, Gary Paul, Eric Daugherty, and Tammi Hartung. "Health Benefits of the Diverse Volatile Oils in Native Plants of Ancient Ironwood-Giant Cactus Forests of the Sonoran Desert: An Adaptation to Climate Change?" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 6 (March 10, 2022): 3250. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19063250.

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We document the species richness and volatile oil diversity in Sonoran Desert plants found in the Arizona Uplands subdivision of this binational USA/Mexico region. Using floristics, we determined that more than 60 species of 178 native plants in the ancient ironwood-giant cactus forests emit fragrant biogenic volatile organic compounds (BVOCs), especially with the onset of summer monsoons. From these desert species, more than 115 volatile oils have been identified from one biogeographic region. For the 5 BVOCs most commonly associated with “forest bathing” practices in Asian temperate forests, at least 15 Sonoran Desert plant species emit them in Arizona Uplands vegetation. We document the potential health benefits attributed to each of 13 BVOCs in isolation, but we also hypothesize that the entire “suite” of BVOCs emitted from a diversity of desert plants during the monsoons may function synergistically to generate additional health benefits. Regular exposure to these BVOC health benefits may become more important to prevent or mitigate diseases of oxidative stress and other climate maladies in a hotter, drier world.
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42

Habibi, Koohyar, Emmanuel Delay, Isabelle Sarfati, Franck Duteille, Krishna B. Clough, and Michael Atlan. "Lessons Learned From Twenty-Eight Cases of Burns Following Breast Reconstruction: An Underestimated Complication Requiring Inclusion in Consent Information." Aesthetic Surgery Journal 41, no. 7 (February 14, 2021): NP773—NP779. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/asj/sjab027.

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Abstract Background There has over recent years been a constant increase in annual breast reconstruction figures. Although reports indicate that burns following breast reconstruction are a rare occurrence, there has nevertheless been a relative increase in cases. The key underlying causes of this type of condition remain unknown. Objectives The authors launched a new study on the demographic characteristics of burns in the breast reconstruction population with the inclusion of up-to-date data to assess cases and contributing factors. Methods The study was a multicenter retrospective review of patients who underwent any type of breast reconstruction and subsequently sustained burn injuries. Results Twenty-eight cases of burn injury following breast reconstruction were documented; 6 involved autologous flaps and 22 involved implants. Nine of the 10 implant exposure cases had previous history of radiotherapy, but there was no statistically significant difference between previous radiotherapy history and implant exposure (P = 0.32). Of the 13 cases sustaining full-thickness burns, a large number included implant-based reconstruction (n = 12, 92%), although no statistically significant difference was observed between type of reconstruction and incidence of full-thickness burns (P = 0.17). Conclusions Each patient undergoing breast reconstruction should be advised of the potential risks and instructed to avoid significant heat exposure and steer clear of dark-colored bathing suits. At the time of writing, this information has yet to be included in the vast majority of surgery-related informed consent documents. Level of Evidence: 4
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43

Melin, Anna, Monica Klungland Torstveit, Louise Burke, Saul Marks, and Jorunn Sundgot-Borgen. "Disordered Eating and Eating Disorders in Aquatic Sports." International Journal of Sport Nutrition and Exercise Metabolism 24, no. 4 (August 2014): 450–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1123/ijsnem.2014-0029.

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Disordered eating behavior (DE) and eating disorders (EDs) are of great concern because of their associations with physical and mental health risks and, in the case of athletes, impaired performance. The syndrome originally known as the Female Athlete Triad, which focused on the interaction of energy availability, reproductive function, and bone health in female athletes, has recently been expanded to recognize that Relative Energy Deficiency in Sport (RED-S) has a broader range of negative effects on body systems with functional impairments in both male and female athletes. Athletes in leanness-demanding sports have an increased risk for RED-S and for developing EDs/DE. Special risk factors in aquatic sports related to weight and body composition management include the wearing of skimpy and tight-fitting bathing suits, and in the case of diving and synchronized swimming, the involvement of subjective judgments of performance. The reported prevalence of DE and EDs in athletic populations, including athletes from aquatic sports, ranges from 18 to 45% in female athletes and from 0 to 28% in male athletes. To prevent EDs, aquatic athletes should practice healthy eating behavior at all periods of development pathway, and coaches and members of the athletes’ health care team should be able to recognize early symptoms indicating risk for energy deficiency, DE, and EDs. Coaches and leaders must accept that DE/EDs can be a problem in aquatic disciplines and that openness regarding this challenge is important.
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44

Ahmad, Mansoor, Abdul Qayoom Paul, and A. Saikia. "Pillow Morphology of Bathani Volcano-sedimentary Sequence of Eastern Indian Shield: Inferences on the Geotectonic and Geo-Environments." Journal of the Geological Society of India 100, no. 2 (February 1, 2024): 218–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.17491/jgsi/2024/173821.

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Abstract The Palaeo-proterozoic Bathani volcano-sedimentary sequence (BVSs) at the northeastern fringe of the Central Indian Tectonic Zone (CITZ), comprises three distinct litho-domains: (i) intrusive granitoid, having xenoliths of basalt, pyroxenite-gabbro-anorthosite suits (Northern Domain), (ii) low-grade volcano-sedimentary sequence along with concordant mafic-ultramafic intrusion (Central Domain) and (iii) folded clastic metasedimentary rocks (Southern Domain). The granitoid is intruded into the Central Domain, where pillow basalt with primary structure is well exposed. The volcanological and morphometric study of the pillows of Central Domain is attempted to understand the physicochemical characteristics and tectonic setup of the magma emplacement. The pillows are small to medium normal-sized with spheroidal, lozenge, and tubular shapes and preserve the primary features like radial and concentric cracks, selvage, pipe vesicles, voids, drain away cavities, way-up features, etc. A low-viscosity magma outpouring over a steep to moderate depositional slope is being deciphered from the morphological study of pillows. The stretching and fast-spreading growth mechanisms with low effusion under a rapid cooling rate have been inferred for these pillows. The morphological features of the rock types and pillows of the BVSs suggest a shallow water (&lt;1000m) divergent rift basin of the back-arc tectonic setting. The trace elemental discrimination plots support the basaltic composition of pillows with E-MORB and back-arc basin environment. The lithological setup, tectonic setting, and regional correlation of BVSs advocate it as an eastern continuation of the Palaeo-proterozoic Mahakoshal belt within the Son Narmada Lineament (SNL) zone of CITZ.
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45

Villafuerte, Cesar V. "Total Thyroidectomy From A Patient’s Perspective." Philippine Journal of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery 32, no. 2 (July 24, 2018): 62–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.32412/pjohns.v32i2.93.

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Dear Editor, Thyroidectomy is a common surgical procedure performed by us otolaryngologists on our patients. Quite often, we make our post-operative rounds on them, not knowing that the patient may have a lot of concerns regarding his or her operation that we somehow take lightly or worse, do not take seriously. I would like to share with other Ear Nose Throat (ENT) surgeons how it was to be a patient who underwent total thyroidectomy. My journey began in the mid- 1990s with an incidental finding of thyroid nodules when I underwent a Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) of the cervical spine. It was then when I started medical suppression and yearly thyroid ultrasound examinations. However as the years passed, the nodules became more numerous involving both lobes and enlarging. It was last July when ultrasonography revealed that 2 of the nodules were solid and large. I then underwent ultrasound guided Fine Needle Aspiration Biopsy of the thyroid nodules for which the result was Bethesda 1 (the biopsy was non-conclusive). It was unanimously decided by the endocrinologist and my ENT surgeons, Dr. Alfredo Pontejos Jr. and Dr. Arsensio Cabungcal, that I would undergo total thyroidectomy. I had myself admitted at the Manila Doctors Hospital (MDH) on September 18, 2017 and underwent the surgical procedure on September 19, 2017. Pre-operatively, I told the ENT chief resident, Dr. Catherine Oseña my special “bilins”: 1) that I had a cervical spine problem so I could not hyperextend the neck; 2) that I was allergic to Penicillin; 3) that I had ceased antiplatelets (Clopidogrel, Aspirin) and fish oil omega for one week; 4) I had allergies to some non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs); 5) if possible the suturing be subcuticular so that there wouldn’t be any need to remove any stitches post-op; and 6) the superior thyroid artery be ligated 2 times and the end of the stump sealed by harmonic scalpel. I had some anxieties regarding the surgery: losing my voice, undergoing tracheostomy for bilateral abductor paralysis since both thyroid lobes would be removed, having a malignant histopathologic result and hypocalcemia. DAY 0: “This is it”, I said to myself, when the nurse fetched me from my room at 6:00 AM to be brought to the operating room (O.R.) for my 7:00 AM schedule. At the O.R., everybody who saw me greeted me with phrases such as “Ikaw pala ang pasyente, kaya mo yan,” “Good luck” and “God bless.” Here I saw one of my surgeons, Dr. Cabungcal enter the OR suite. It was then when I saw my anesthesiologists, Dr. Ariel La Rosa and Dr. Greg Macasaet. The last memory I had pre-op was that of Dr. La Rosa inserting an intravenous (I.V.) line in my right wrist and that was the last thing I remembered. I woke up, already in the Post-Anesthesia Care Unit (PACU) or Recovery Room (RR) when I felt severe pain in my neck (surgical area). I also wanted to fix the pillow at the back of my head, but I did not want to cause any strain on my anterior neck. It was also here when I was very happy to hear my own voice. It was then I said that the surgeons preserved my voice. “Whataguys!” I said to my self, “Thank God.” It was very painful then, I remember the PACU nurse injecting something thru my I.V. line. I felt the medication run thru the I.V. line towards my arm and throughout my body and this made me sleep again (later I found out that it was nalbuphine). I recognize seeing my wife Lil, my son Vinci and the ENT resident, Dr. Dindo Retreta at the PACU. The medication I was given made me sleep again. I woke up again and heard that I was being wheeled out of the PACU to be brought to my room. I only learned later that I slept about an hour after the nalbuphine was given. In my hospital room, the pain in the neck was really painful (9/10) and I had difficulty expelling the phlegm from my trachea. Each time I swallowed my saliva, I could feel my trachea move up with accompanying pain. When the resident-on-duty (ROD) visited, I was given N-acetylcysteine effervescent tablet BID (Ed: bis in die; twice a day) that was very helpful as it made my expectoration easier. I could feel the pressure dressing over my neck, which was now stiff due to dried blood. I had my first meal at around 4:00 PM. I remember it was a tuna sandwich and cold water which I drank using a straw from the hospital plastic cup. Every bite and swallow was painful in the neck and throat. I could not detect whether the pain was coming from the throat or from the surgical site. My antibiotic was given I.V. and so was the pain reliever parecoxib, paracetamol and tranexamic acid. I still did not resume the blood thinners to prevent any post-op bleeding. I tried to get up after dinner to walk around but warm serosnguinous fluid came out of the drain soaking my hospital gown. I then had the nurse call the ENT ROD to change my thyroid dressing. In a few minutes, a new fluffy gauze pressure dressing was applied by the ROD and my hospital gown was replaced. I had a good sleep with some pain still at the surgical site and throat. DAY 1: The day started with Holy Communion in my room, a good breakfast and my usual morning breakfast pills (thyroxine, nevibolol and folic acid). The residents came and changed the dressing. The resident “milked” the neck trying to see if there was any accumulated blood or serum at the surgical site. This was the most painful of the whole surgical experience (10/10), and it was good news that there was no hematoma in the operative site. They then mobilized the drain by a few centimeters. The dressing was still replaced with less fluffy dressing. I have allergic rhinitis, and the act of sneezing caused recurrent pain in the surgical site, so I asked for an antihistamine tablet. My neck and throat were still painful on Day 1 (8/10) but relieved every time the I.V. analgesic was given. In the afternoon, I had a sponge bath given by the nurse on duty with me lying in bed. I still had throat phlegm but thanks to the acetylcysteine effervescent tablet it was easier to expectorate. Every time the ROD made rounds, he checked for hypocalcemia-- fortunately I did not have it. DAY 2: The day again started with Holy Communion and breakfast in my hospital room. My main attending surgeon, Dr. Pontejos made his rounds late morning and he changed the dressing and removed the drain. I was here that I realized that the superior and inferior flaps including the incision were all numb. There was no pain on drain removal as well as on tying of the standby suture to close the drain site. They were all numb. At this point, I realized that in all our patients, this removal of the drain and the tying the standby suture were painless. After a bath in the mid-afternoon before discharge, I was then feeling better but the pain was still there (7/10). On the way home, I bought some sterile gauze, plaster, mupirocin ointment and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) for my neck wound dressing at home. DAY 3. The pain was less (5/10), and I did not have to take any analgesic from hereon. Bathing became a problem, but I devised a way to bathe that I adopted for the following days. In the shower, I first shampooed by hair with my head and face facing down with my wife holding the telephone shower and focusing it where it was needed. After this I dried my head and hair with a clean towel then bathed the rest of the body in standing position with the telephone shower targeting the area needing to be rinsed. I did this method of bathing for a week until I decided that I could now bathe without my head looking down. I was at rest at home for 2 weeks. DAY 6: It was one of the best days of my life when the chief resident told me that the histopathologic result was multinodular goiter and no malignancy. Yehey! Thanks to God! God is really good! To summarize some of the things I want to share with other thyroid surgeons: I didn’t realize that the post-op pain was really painful, so I can now understand my patients if they experience pain post-operatively. It was difficult to expel throat phlegm and the N-acetylcysteine effervescent tablet was a big help in liquefying the phlegm. The whole area is numb (superior and inferior flaps), thus the removal of the drain and sutures would not cause any pain on the patient. The “milking” of the site was painful and this procedure should be gently done. If the patient has nasal allergy, cover the patient with an antihistamine to prevent sneezing and unnecessary pain. Teach your patient the way I bathed and order a sponge bath on Day 1 and 2. I hope this sharing of experience will benefit all your patients who will undergo the same procedure- thyroidectomy. I would like to thank my surgeons (Dr. Alfredo Pontejos Jr. and Dr. Arsenio Cabungcal), the anesthesiologists (Dr. Ariel La Rosa and Dr. Greg Macasaet), the surgical assistants (MDH ORL residents – Drs. Catehrine Elise Oseña and Dindo Retreta), my endocrinologist Dr. Robert Mirasol and my Cardiologist Dr. Rogelio Tangco, for the excellent job, well done. I would like to thank my family-- Lil my wife, Vinci, Ericka, Raymond for their love and support and for taking care of me. I would like to thank the MDH ORL Residents for taking care of me and for a job well done as well. I would also like to thank all the nursing staff at the MDH tower 1 and the OR, PACU nurses for taking care of me as well. Sincerely yours, Cesar V. Villafuerte Jr. MD, MHA
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46

"Angiokeratomas in a bathing suit distribution." Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology 72, no. 5 (May 2015): AB103. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jaad.2015.02.428.

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47

Gambichler, T., M. Doerler, C. H. Scheel, K. Bastek, and M. Chatzipantazi. "Prurigo pigmentosa (Nagashima disease) in bathing suit distribution mimicking contact dermatitis." Journal of the European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology, September 27, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jdv.18607.

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48

Martín‐Alcalde, Javier, Elena Naz‐Villalba, Ana Pampín‐Franco, and José L. López‐Estebaranz. "Bathing suit ichthyosis: report of a case in a Senegalese patient." International Journal of Dermatology 59, no. 7 (April 28, 2020). http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ijd.14900.

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49

Tani, N., N. Yamada, T. Okazaki, T. Horie, H. Nakano, D. Sawamura, and O. Yamamoto. "Novel TGM1 Gene Mutation in a Japanese Patient with Bathing Suit Ichthyosis." Acta Dermato Venereologica, 2020, 0. http://dx.doi.org/10.2340/00015555-3643.

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50

Arteaga‐Henríquez, María, Leonie Frommherz, Judith Fischer, and Cristina Has. "Autosomal recessive congenital ichthyoses (ARCI) in a “bathing‐suit” distribution: progression over time." International Journal of Dermatology 60, no. 8 (April 12, 2021). http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ijd.15599.

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