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American comic actor W.C.Fields, of the raspy voice and bulbous nose, born in Philadelphia in 1880, amongst his films were, "It's A Gift" 1934, "David Copperfield" and "The Man On The Flying Trapeze" 1935.
11 sty 2018 · The American entertainer of vaudeville and the movies, W.C. Fields (1880-1946), had rosacea with rhinophyma (ryno-fee-ma). If it is not effectively treated, rosacea can cause rhinophyma (literally, growth of the nose). With rhinophyma, the nose is bulbous, enlarged and red and there may also be thick bumps on the lower half of the nose and ...
23 cze 2022 · Rhinophyma, or phymatous rosacea, is a benign overgrowth of the sebaceous glands, blood vessels, and dermal tissue of the nose that was most often associated with the American comedian W.C. Fields [1, 2].
25 mar 2020 · Rhinophyma (bulbous nose)* Prominent scar formation from cyst lesions. Both rosacea and acne vulgaris are cosmetically embarrassing disorders. Flushing and blushing are common early symptoms of rosacea. Skin involvement is limited to the central facial areas—nose, cheeks, forehead, chin.
Rhinophyma is a condition causing development of a large, bulbous nose associated with granulomatous infiltration, commonly due to untreated rosacea. [1] The condition is most common in older white males.
When The Bank Dick was released in 1940, the image of W.C. Fields was moreor less a caricature. His bulbous nose, middle-aged girth, and use of the phrase “Ah, yes . . .” were sent up across the popular culture of the time, perhaps most harshly in Warner Bros. cartoons (in one, Fields was recast as a duplicitous pig; in another as a ...
Rhinophyma, or phymatous rosacea, is a benign overgrowth of the sebaceous glands, blood vessels, and dermal tissue of the nose that was most often associated with the Ameri-can comedian W.C. Fields [1, 2]. The term rhinophyma stems from Greek etiology, with rhis meaning “nose” and phyma meaning “growth” [3].