Dr. Dennis H. Oh M.D.
Dermatologist
4150 Clement St Dermatology Dept (19 San Francisco CA, 94121About
Dr. Dennis Oh is a dermatologist practicing in San Francisco, CA. Dr. Oh specializes in skin care. Dermatologists evaluate and manage both common and uncommon skin conditions. These conditions include acne, psoriasis, warts, skin infections, atopic dermatitis, herpes simplex and more. Dermatologists are also experts in more complex skin diseases like impetigo, hidradenitis and milaria. Dr. Oh diagnoses skin problems and develops unique treatments plans for each individual patient.
Education and Training
Stanford Univ Sch Of Med- Stanford Ca 1993
Stanford University School of Medicine 1992
Board Certification
DermatologyAmerican Board of DermatologyABD
Provider Details
Expert Publications
Data provided by the National Library of Medicine- Spatial control of reactive oxygen species formation in fibroblasts using two-photon excitation.
- Differentiating human keratinocytes are deficient in p53 but retain global nucleotide excision repair following ultraviolet radiation.
- Proficient global nucleotide excision repair in human keratinocytes but not in fibroblasts deficient in p53.
- gamma-H2AX formation in response to interstrand crosslinks requires XPF in human
- Impaired repair of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers in human keratinocytes deficient in p53 and p63.
- DNA polymerase eta reduces the gamma-H2AX response to psoralen interstrand crosslinks in human cells.
- Modulation of psoralen DNA crosslinking kinetics associated with a triplex-forming oligonucleotide.
- The impact of store-and-forward teledermatology on skin cancer diagnosis and treatment.
- Basal cell carcinomas arising within multiple trichoepitheliomas.
- Hereditary photodermatoses.
- Structural determinants of photoreactivity of triplex forming oligonucleotides conjugated to psoralens.
- Functional relevance of the histone gammaH2Ax in the response to DNA damaging agents.
- Defective DNA repair and cell cycle arrest in cells expressing Merkel cell polyomavirus T antigen.
- Vitamin D receptor mediates DNA repair and is UV inducible in intact epidermis but not in cultured keratinocytes.
- Immunohistochemical prognostication of Merkel cell carcinoma: p63 expression but not polyomavirus status correlates with outcome.
Clinical Trials
Treatments
- Dermatitis
- Actinic Keratosis
- Seborrheic Keratosis
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