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Journal ArticleDOI

The genetics of vitiligo in Korean patients.

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TLDR
This research analyzed 120 Korean proband families to clarify which genetic factors are involved in the pathogenesis of vitiligo in Korean patients and found that environmental factors are thought to be involved.
Abstract
Background Vitiligo is a common disorder whose exact cause is unknown, but genetic factors are thought to be involved. We analyzed 120 Korean proband families to clarify which genetic factors are involved in the pathogenesis of vitiligo in Korean patients. Methods The genetics of vitiligo were analyzed in 120 Korean proband families out of 1030 vitiligo patients. Each family was analyzed through a proband afflicted with vitiligo. Results In 51 (42.5%) of 120 proband families, at least one first-degree relative of the proband had vitiligo. The incidence of those affected among 1755 relatives (first-, second-, and third-degree) was found to be 8.0 ± 0.6%. There was a statistically significant departure for segregation analysis which was inconsistent with inheritance as an autosomal or X-linked locus model. On the basis of our results, the inheritance pattern of vitiligo is more likely to tend toward the model of multifactorial inheritance. The threshold trait among first-degree relatives (7.2%) appeared to tend more toward the square root of the frequency in the general population (10%) than towards those of dominant (50%) or recessive (25%) models. Conclusions These results indicate that there are certain genetic factors involved in the etiology of vitiligo, and that vitiligo seems to have a polygenic nature.

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Journal ArticleDOI

On the etiology of contact/occupational vitiligo

TL;DR: The data suggests that tyrosinase-related protein-1, rather than tyOSinase, facilitates toxicity, possibly by catalytic conversion of the compounds, which results in the generation of radical oxygen species.
Journal ArticleDOI

Vitiligo. Pathogenesis and treatment.

TL;DR: Treatments for vitiligo include narrowband ultraviolet (UV) B (311 nm) therapy, the combination of corticosteroid cream + UVA therapy, and the transplantation of autologous pigment cells in various modalities.
Journal ArticleDOI

Genetic association of the catalase gene (CAT) with vitiligo susceptibility.

TL;DR: The observations that T/C heterozygotes are more frequent among vitiligo patients than controls and that the C allele is transmitted more frequently to patients than control subjects suggest that linked mutations in or near the CAT gene might contribute to a quantitative deficiency of catalase activity in the epidermis and the accumulation of excess hydrogen peroxide.
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Six Decades of Vitiligo Genetics: Genome-Wide Studies Provide Insights Into Autoimmune Pathogenesis

TL;DR: Genetic analyses of GV span six decades, with the goal of understanding biological mechanisms and elucidating pathways that underlie the disease, produce a rich yield of validated GV susceptibility genes that encode components of biological pathways reaching from immune cells to the melanocyte.
Journal ArticleDOI

Highlights in pathogenesis of vitiligo

TL;DR: The findings behind the most and updated theories behind this psychologically debilitating and disfiguring disease, which is a multifactorial disease involving the interplay of several factors, are presented.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

On the etiology of vitiligo and gray hair

TL;DR: From an analysis of the clinical features of vitiligo and of the chemicals that cause depigmentation, a melanocyte self-destruct hypothesis for the etiology of vitILigo and graying of hair can be derived.
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Vitiligo, thyroid disease and autoimmunity

TL;DR: Thyroglobulin antibodies and complement‐fixing antibodies are significantly associated with vitiligo as compared with psoriasis, and there is no evidence that thyroid autoimmunity is associated positively or negatively with Psoriasis.
Journal ArticleDOI

The simulation of mendelism.

J.H. Edwards
- 01 Jul 1960 - 
Journal ArticleDOI

Segmental vitiligo: clinical findings in 208 patients.

TL;DR: The clinical features of segmental Vitiligo differ from those of nonsegmental vitiligo; pathogenesis may also differ.
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