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Due to Psoriasis being a medical condition you can find pictures on either websites that evolve arround medical problems or in books. You should especially look for books or wensites about Dermatology, as Dermatology is the branch of medicine that is focused on the skin and Psotiasis is a skin problem.
no. psoriasis is a skin problem and poison Ivy is a plant that gives alergies to the skin of people who are alergic to such plant.
applying thoughts
Could be psoriasis, try Neutrogena T/Gel Therapeutic Shampoo, the one with yellow label not blue. if psoriasis is the problem it should give instant relief.
Exercise is a healthy and low-risk way into treating Psoriasis, there are also therapies in where you can partake to help your problem. An example is using Ultraviolet-light radiation to kill the cells.
High uric levels can indicate that medical condition gout. Gout presents symptoms like swelling and pain in joints. Another symptom is peeling dry skin on the affected joint, usually the big toe. People with the skin problem psoriasis may be more at risk of developing gout. Psoriasis has symptoms that include itchy, dry and flaky skin.
Yes and no in some ways. Yes, because it just keeps from grossing people out, but no because psoriasis can't be spread by contact. It is just a skin problem that that person has and can take medication for.
It depends on what you mean by "diagnose medical issues". If you mean medical diagnosis per se, not unless they are a doctor. If you mean whether questions that relate to medical application vs technical unemployment requirements that has nothing to do with treatment, cause of medical problem (unless, of course it may relate to working conditions), etc. then yes they need to deal with those issues.
Medical Breakthrough means that there is a newdevelopment in medicine which could be the answer to a problem or a new problem.
medical part
Most People with psoriatic arthritis will have some skin signs some where along the line This disease develops after skin psoriasis in approximately 70% of patients. the rest of the patients have either a simultaneous onset of skin and joint psoriasis or joint symptoms come on before any skin problem is noted. There is no relationship between the severity of the skin disease and the severity of the joint disease.
No, they will not fit. It is a clearance problem when turning the wheel from stop to stop.