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Easier method to defeat Psoriasis laepraformis by using plants native to the same places where this disease is endemic
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Journal of Cosmetology & Trichology

ISSN: 2471-9323

Open Access

Easier method to defeat Psoriasis laepraformis by using plants native to the same places where this disease is endemic


15th World Conference on Cosmetic Dermatology & Skin Diseases

September 25-26, 2019 | Lisbon, Portugal

Lorenzo Martini

Italy

Posters & Accepted Abstracts: J Cosmo Trichol

Abstract :

One of the latest steps of the psoriatic syndromes is the psoriasis laepraformis. The AA, unscrupulously tend to assert that it is always better to follow the historiographical path that drives to a determined cure that had been well established and tested since centuries, even if the original ideas were exceptional and results were sometimes not quite satisfactory.

Aldous Huxley recited “Technological progress has merely provided us with more efficient means for going backwards.”And thus the AA has preferred to go back to investigate the very history of Psoriasis those in very ancient times was confounded with Leprosy.

Leprosy is an ancient, chronic granulomatous disease caused by acid fast bacilli, the Gerhard Armauer Hansenā??s bacilli spirilli, affecting all age groups and has no sex predilection. Usually the disease presents with hypo pigmented patches, nodules and plaques with or without loss of sensations and thickening of nerves. Leprosy has a wide range of presentation which can mimic various other\differential diagnosis is so wide that one has to exclude wide variety of dermatological diseases before stamping it to be leprosy as stigma is still associated to it. So, since the psoriasis is one of a plentitude of illnesses that does not know therapeutic results at all, notwithstanding ultra-modern and most sophisticated shamans and opinion-makers give false hope and mislead, is resistant to every type of medication, we have observed what ancient physicians employed to combat this malaise in the lands where the illness was endemic.

Biography :

E-mail: Lorenzo.martini@unisi.it

 

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