Title
Classification of acne: An Ibero-Latin American consensus, 2014
Other title
Clasificación del acné: Consenso Ibero-Latinoamericano, 2014
Date Issued
01 January 2015
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Kaminsky A.
Florez-White M.
Arias M.I.
Bagatin E.
Adame Miranda G.
Alves G.
Arias M.I.
Barona M.I.
Bagatin E.
Cantillo L.
Cirigliano M.
Costantini S.E.
Del Pino Flores M.E.
Díez De Medina J.C.
Fierro L.
Florez-White M.
Follador I.
Giansante E.
Guerra Tapia A.
Herane M.I.
Kaminsky A.
Molina M.T.
Maciel R.
Madrigal F.
Massa A.
Naccha Torres E.M.
Pérez M.
Piquero Martin J.
Polanco M.
Poletti E.D.
Quintanilla L.
Ramos E Silva M.
Rondón Lugo A.J.
Santiago Pujol D.
Steiner D.
Terzian L.R.
Troielli P.
Velázquez X.
Villanueva C.
Publisher(s)
Catedra Universitario, Facultad de Medicina
Abstract
Acne is the most common chronic skin disease among young people, and it is one of the most frequent causes of dermatological consultation. Many classifications of acne are known; some simple and others more complex and difficult to understand. The Ibero-Latin American Group on Acne Study (GILEA) -Chapter of acne, rosacea, and related conditions, from the Ibero-Latin American College of Dermatology (CILAD)- is composed by renowned dermatologists, specialists in acne, from most countries of Latin America and the Iberian Peninsula. Since its inception in 2004, the group has been working on a classification that seeks to associate the concepts of age, clinical form and severity, as well as a treatment algorithm based on this classification. The result was the first version that was published in 2012 in the second edition of Acné. Un enfoque global (Acne; a global approach), and the classification presented here is a new version (2014) with slight modifications over the previous consensus and the result of consultations among the members of GILEA. The authors consider that this classification will provide a new basis for addressing clinical, epidemiological and therapeutic studies. Nevertheless, like any other medical concept, it is open to future changes resulting from the advances in science.
Start page
18
End page
23
Volume
43
Issue
1
Language
Spanish
OCDE Knowledge area
Dermatología, Enfermedades venéreas
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-84930722152
Source
Medicina Cutanea Ibero-Latino-Americana
ISSN of the container
02105187
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus