Q. Yang
Anhui Medical University
5 Papers
31 Citations
Q. Yang is an academic researcher from Anhui Medical University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Marie Unna hereditary hypotrichosis & Hypotrichosis. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 5 publications.
Chat about Author
Papers
The genetic epidemiology of alopecia areata in China
Sen Yang,J. Yang,Jiang-Bo Liu,Hua Wang,Q. Yang,Min Gao,Yan-Hua Liang,G.S. Lin,Da Lin,X.L. Hu,L. Fan,Xiaoguang Zhang +11 more
TL;DR: This data indicates that preoperatively diagnosed alopecia areata is an organ‐specific autoimmune disease with genetic predisposition and an environmental trigger and there are few clinical data in Asians.
122
Refinement of a locus for Marie Unna hereditary hypotrichosis to a 1·1-cM interval at 8p21.3
Ping-Ping He,Xiaoguang Zhang,Q. Yang,Ming Li,Yan-Hua Liang,Sen Yang,Kai-Lin Yan,Yong Cui,Y.Y. Shen,Hua Wang,Liangdan Sun,Wen-Hui Du,Y.J. Shen,Shi-Jie Xu,Wei Huang +14 more
TL;DR: Marie Unna hereditary hypotrichosis is a rare autosomal congenital alopecia with progressive hair loss starting in early childhood and accelerating at puberty and no genes for MUHH have been identified to date.
17
Marie Unna hereditary hypotrichosis: report of a Chinese family and evidence for genetic heterogeneity
Kai-Lin Yan,Ping-Ping He,Sen Yang,Min Li,Q. Yang,Yunqing Ren,Yong Cui,Min Gao,Feng-Li Xiao,Wei Huang,Xiaoguang Zhang +10 more
TL;DR: Genotyping and linkage analysis using 11 polymorphic microsatellite markers spanning the MUHH locus at 8p revealed significant exclusion of this locus indicating that there is a range of clinical presentations in MUHH, and that more than one genetic locus is responsible for the disorder.
14
Characteristics of genetic epidemiology and genetic models for vitiligo.
Xuejun Zhang,Jiang-Bo Liu,Jin-Ping Gui,Ming Li,Quan-Geng Xiong,Hong-Bo Wu,Jin-Xian Li,Sen Yang,Hongyan Wang,Min Gao,J. Yang,Q. Yang +11 more
TL;DR: Different phenotypes of vitiligo had different pathogeneses and genetic backgrounds, indicating that onset of vitILigo is possibly affected by both genetic backgrounds and common environmental factors.