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  1. Keloid scars from their burns marred their faces and many of their hand burns healed into bent claw-like positions. These women, as well as the other citizens affected by the A-bomb, were referred to as hibakusha, meaning 'explosion-affected people'.

  2. Formation of keloidal scars on the neck of a victim of the Hiroshima blast. The scars have formed where the victim's skin was directly exposed to the heat of the explosion's initial flash. The foreground shows the ruins of the Hiroshima Gas Company Building (800 feet from the hypocenter).

  3. 2 Δεκ 2019 · Patients with keloids complained of an itchy sensation. After several decades, keloids become flattened, suggesting that the hyperplasia has subsided, denying cancerous nature. Medical research has not clearly explained why keloids were formed so often.

  4. The keloid scar changed Hiranos physical appearance from “normal” to “bad-looking” or even “dirty,” as he said frankly in the interview. He usually hides his scars from public view; however, he had to expose them sometimes, especially when he was working.

  5. Keloid specimens From around early 1946, the skin and flesh around burn scars that were thought to have healed swelled up and stretched the skin. It is thought that the keloids resulting from the atomic bombing were caused by the radiation.

  6. 23 Ιουλ 2020 · By allowing scientists to study their suffering, atomic bomb survivors have transformed our understanding of radiation's health effects. A mushroom cloud hangs over Hiroshima on 6 August 1945. An estimated 90,000 to 120,000 people died that day or soon after; many others developed cancer later.

  7. Appearing often in persons exposed to the bombing about two kilometers from the hypocenter, keloids formed four months after the bombing and became most prominent 6 to 14 months thereafter. Most of the scars shrank and healed after about two years.

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