Barbara A. Gilchrest
Harvard University
398 Papers
4.7K Citations
Barbara A. Gilchrest is an academic researcher from Harvard University. The author has contributed to research in topics: DNA damage & Keratinocyte. The author has an hindex of 88, co-authored 394 publications. Previous affiliations of Barbara A. Gilchrest include Boston University & United States Department of Agriculture.
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Papers
•Book
Fitzpatrick's Dermatology In General Medicine
Lowell A. Goldsmith,Thomas B. Fitzpatrick,Stephen I. Katz,Barbara A. Gilchrest,Amy S. Paller,David J. Leffell,K Wolff +6 more
- 01 Jan 1999
TL;DR: Widely acclaimed dermatological treatise is completely revised and updated with over forty new chapters and an entirely new section on dermatologic surgery.
4.4K
The pathogenesis of melanoma induced by ultraviolet radiation
TL;DR: Skin cancers, predominantly basal-cell and squamous-cell carcinomas, have accounted for an estimated 40 percent of all cancers in the United States in recent years, and their frequency has been increasing.
862
Photoageing: mechanism, prevention and therapy.
Mina Yaar,Barbara A. Gilchrest +1 more
TL;DR: Improved understanding of the skin’s innate UV protective mechanisms has also given rise to several novel treatment concepts that promise to revolutionize this field within the coming decade.
726
Treatment of children with port-wine stains using the flashlamp-pulsed tunable dye laser.
TL;DR: Two distinguishing characteristics of the flashlamp-pulsed tunable dye laser are attributed to an emission wavelength of 577 nm, theoretically ideal for selective absorption by the intravascular target oxyhemoglobin, and a pulse duration of 360 microseconds, which closely matches the thermal relaxation time for dermal blood vessels and hence avoids diffuse nonspecific thermal necrosis with subsequent scarring of the treated skin.
445
A review of skin ageing and its medical therapy
TL;DR: Recent work has substantially elucidated the ageing processes that affect the skin and has demonstrated that many of unwanted changes can be improved by topical therapy.
422