Nurse Practitioners, Physician Assistants, physicians
Chronic Urticaria, Hives
Dr. Beck's laboratory focuses on understanding the interaction between skin barrier defects and the innate and adaptive immune system in subjects with atopic dermatitis, the most common inflammatory skin disorder. Her laboratory was the first to describe epidermal tight junction (TJ) defects in this disease. They continue to characterize these TJ defects at the molecular level and hope to determine whether these defects develop on a genetic, epigenetic or acquired basis. A number of therapeutic agents are being tested in vitro and in vivo for their ability to repair TJ defects. Her laboratory has also identified that several innate immune pathways including NOD2, TLR2 and 3 enhance epidermal TJ function. Her laboratory is also interested in understanding why subjects with atopic dermatitis are chronically colonized with bacteria, and more frequently infected with both bacteria and viruses. The working hypothesis is that AD subjects have an inadequate epidermal innate immune response to these cutaneous pathogens. Dr. Beck's clinical and laboratory work on atopic dermatitis has been supported by grants from the National Eczema Association, NIH/NIAID, NIH/NIAMS, Dermatology Foundation, and from biotechnology and pharmaceutical industries. She is a subcontractor on the NIH/NIAID funded Atopic Dermatitis Research Network (ADRN), which has amassed the largest registry of well-characterized subjects with Atopic Dermatitis in the US.
| 1. | Formulate an appropriate diagnostic workup for symptomatology suggestive of chronic urticaria (CU) taking into account the potential differential diagnosis | 2. | Incorporate into practice evidence-based treatment options and guidelines for managing CU that maximize efficacy while minimizing adverse effects |
| 1. | Formulate an appropriate diagnostic workup for symptomatology suggestive of chronic urticaria (CU) taking into account the potential differential diagnosis |
| 2. | Incorporate into practice evidence-based treatment options and guidelines for managing CU that maximize efficacy while minimizing adverse effects |
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