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Leprology and betrayal in Shakespeare's Hamlet.

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This article is published in JAMA Dermatology.The article was published on 2014-09-01. It has received 4 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Betrayal & Hamlet (place).

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Citations
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Dangerous plants in dermatology: Legal and controlled

TL;DR: Cannabis, Euphorbia, Ricinus, Podophyllum, Veratrum, mushrooms, and nightshades, along with resveratrol and cocaine are examined as they relate to dermatology.
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The toxic touch-cutaneous poisoning in classics and Shakespeare

TL;DR: Although most poisons are best absorbed via the gastrointestinal or respiratory tracts, many can be absorbed through the skin, and several can cause extreme discomfort or death following skin exposure.
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On Shakespeare and cutaneous diseases.

TL;DR: Shakespeare documents the "royal touch" in Macbeth, which links the ability of a monarch to heal the skin lesions of extrapulmonary tuberculosisto political legitimacy, and does catalogue the ways these acquired diseases of the skin are used in daily speech and character writing.
References
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Arteriolar endothelial cell barrier separates two populations of muscarinic receptors.

TL;DR: Separate and independent populations of receptors in the vessel wall suggests the potential for differential control between humoral and adventitial sources of vasoactive metabolites.
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Scopolamine and the murder of King Hamlet.

TL;DR: The ghost of the king appears before his son, Prince Hamlet, and tells him that his own brother, now his converted stepfather, has killed him, pouring into his ear the contents of an ampoule of henbane.
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A medieval sculpture of leprosy in the Cistercian Abbaye de Cadouin.

TL;DR: A figurine (sculpture) of l'Abbaye de Cadouin, en Dordogne (France), datant du 15 e siecle as discussed by the authors.