1. Vitiligo: MedlinePlus
Vitiligo causes white patches on your skin. It can also affect your eyes, mouth and nose. It occurs when the cells that give your skin its color are destroyed. No one knows what destroys them. It is more common in people with autoimmune diseases, ...
MedlinePlus (Offsite)
2. Vitiligo: MedlinePlus Medical Encyclopedia
Vitiligo is a skin condition in which there is loss of pigment (color) from areas of skin, resulting in irregular white
MedlinePlus (Offsite)
3. Vitiligo - [Support Group]
National. 36+ groups and 4 international groups. Founded 1995. Raise awareness, educate and support not only the patients but family members also. Networking, literature, newsletter, information and referrals, yearly seminars and conferences. Bill...
Healthline.com (OMS Preferred Provider)
4. Index of /html
Index of /html
www.agsdus.org
5. Vitiligo Picture (Hardin MD Super Site Sample)
This is a sample picture from DermNet.com, hosted on the Hardin MD server. For other pictures at DermNet.com, choose links for Vitiligo on this page: Disorders of Pigmentation
www.lib.uiowa.edu
6. Index of /gladstone/html
Index of /gladstone/html
www.gladstone.ucsf.edu
7. Vitiligo
Vitiligo usually begins with a few small white patches that may gradually spread over the body over the course of several months. Sometimes the patches continue to widen and spread, but usually they stay in the same place for years. The location o...
my.clevelandclinic.org
8. Vitiligo
Vitiligo is a medical condition that causes the skin to lose color. Some people develop a few spots that may lighten or turn completely white. Others can have widespread loss of skin color. Vitiligo can develop on any part of the body but commonly...
www.aad.org
9. Vitiligo
Science hasn't identified the cause of vitiligo, but some researchers theorize that an autoimmune process plays a role. In an autoimmune disease, the body's immune system starts attacking innocent tissues. In vitiligo, antibodies may develop again...
www.mbhs.org
10. Vitiligo
Fair, dark, or any shade in between — most of us have skin that is generally the same color all over our bodies. But this isn't the case for people who have a condition called
websrv02.kidshealth.org