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Jan Nico Bouwes Bavinck

Researcher at Leiden University Medical Center

Publications -  126
Citations -  11657

Jan Nico Bouwes Bavinck is an academic researcher from Leiden University Medical Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Skin cancer & Transplantation. The author has an hindex of 52, co-authored 119 publications receiving 10900 citations. Previous affiliations of Jan Nico Bouwes Bavinck include University of Amsterdam & Leiden University.

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Acute generalized exanthematous pustulosis (AGEP)--a clinical reaction pattern.

TL;DR: There seems to be a subgroup with characteristic clinical features and a typical course which is mostly caused by drugs for which the term acute generalized exanthematous pustulosis (AGEP) has been established.
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Incidence of skin cancer after renal transplantation in The Netherlands.

TL;DR: The overall risk to develop a first tumor increased from 10% after 10 years to 40% after 20 years of graft survival, and the overall incidence was 250 times higher and that of BCC 10 times higher when compared with the general Dutch population.
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Subclavian artery supply disruption sequence: hypothesis of a vascular etiology for Poland, Klippel-Feil, and Möbius anomalies.

TL;DR: A hypothesis is presented to explain the pathogenesis of the Poland, Klippel-Feil, and Möbius anomalies, isolated absence of the pectoralis major with breast hypoplasia, isolated terminal transverse limb defects, and the Sprengel anomaly and the term subclavian artery supply disruption sequence (SASDS) is suggested for the group of birth defects represented by the above conditions.
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Discovery of a New Human Polyomavirus Associated with Trichodysplasia Spinulosa in an Immunocompromized Patient

TL;DR: The identification of a new human polyomavirus in plucked facial spines of a heart transplant patient with trichodysplasia spinulosa, a rare skin disease exclusively seen in immunocompromized patients, and the presence of TSV also in clinically unaffected individuals suggests frequent virus transmission causing subclinical, probably latent infections.