ABSTRACT
This article has been retracted: please see Elsevier Policy on Article Withdrawal (http://www.elsevier.com/locate/withdrawalpolicy). This article has been retracted at the request of the Editor-in-Chief and Authors. We wish to retract the abstract "The Virtual Cutting Edge: Adolescent Self-injury and YouTube," published in the October 2015 issue of Annals. The abstract excessively borrowed from the text and methodology of a previous study published elsewhere.1 All authors recognize the seriousness of this issue and apologize to the editors and readers of Annals. Jeffrey S. Jones, MD Chad Garthe, MD Lindsey Ouellette, MS Jason Seamon, DO Department of Emergency Medicine MSU College of Human Medicine Grand Rapids, MI 1. Lewis SP, Heath NL, St. Denis JM, et al. The scope of nonsuicidal self-injury on YouTube. Pediatrics. 2011;1127:e552-e557.
ABSTRACT
The thickness of the stratum corneum was measured by optical coherence tomography at the center and sides of the tactile elevations of all fingers in 87 healthy volunteers and 18 people with diabetes who performed regular glucose self-control. The cornified epidermis was thickest at the thumbs, and thickness decreased toward the little finger. The cornified epidermis was thinner at the sides of the tactile elevations than at the center, and it was thinner in women than in men. In people with diabetes, the cornified epidermis of the fingers most frequently used for capillary blood sampling was not conspicuously thickened.