| Literature DB >> 32735970 |
Carlos Gustavo Wambier1, Sergio Vaño-Galván2, John McCoy3, Suraj Pai4, Rachita Dhurat4, Andy Goren3.
Abstract
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Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32735970 PMCID: PMC7387285 DOI: 10.1016/j.jaad.2020.07.099
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Acad Dermatol ISSN: 0190-9622 Impact factor: 11.527
Fig 1The Gabrin sign. Severe AGA with an HNS score of greater than 3 in the context of COVID-19 infection is associated with worse hospital outcomes. The photograph shows a 37-year-old man hospitalized in Brazil for severe COVID-19, without comorbidities; he required a ventilator for 10 days. The bars depict outcomes of a pilot study performed in India in May 2020 among 44 men who had AGA scored with HNS. The Gabrin sign was associated with worse hospital outcomes (use of ventilator and deaths), Fisher's exact test, P = .014. All men had an HNS score of greater than 1. Only men with the Gabrin sign had worse outcomes (red and black bars). Proportions of worse outcomes increased with higher HNS scores (HNS score of 3-7, 62%; HNS score of 3v-7: 67%; and HNS score of 4-7: 75%). AGA, Androgenetic alopecia; HNS, Hamilton-Norwood scale.
Fig 2Age-matched comparison of AGA of very severe baldness between the Australian 2003 data (general population) versus the Spanish 2020 data (hospitalized men with severe COVID-19). Patients with COVID-19 showed higher frequencies of very severe baldness at all age groups. The gap significantly increases after 55 years. The majority of patients hospitalized because of severe COVID-19 older than 55 years presented with very severe baldness. Very severe baldness accounted for “frontal and vertex” in the data from Severi et al and HNS score of 4 to 7 in the data from Wambier et al. More details are available via Mendeley at https://dx.doi.org/10.17632/jk63cthxbr.2. AGA, Androgenetic alopecia.