Mixed connective tissue disease Images
Go to article Mixed connective tissue disease
Mixed connective tissue disease: Collage with detailed images of a poikilodermatic skin condition; note the (scleroderma-like) hyperkeratotic cuticles with the megacapillaries.

Mixed connective tissue disease: 43-year-old female patient (with clinical aspect of systemic lupus erythematosus) who fulfils the criteria of MCTD: U1.nRNP : titre : >1:1600; characteristics of systemic lupus erythematosus, Raynaud's phenomenon, swollen hands as well as feeling ill, fatigue, proximal muscle weakness (typical myositis symptoms).

Mixed connective tissue disease, swelling and diffuse redness of the eyelids, perioral pallor; extensive erythema of the neck and décolleté, tired facial expression, detection of U1-nRNP antibodies.

Mixed connective tissue disease. generalized extensive poicilodermal spots. painful swelling of the right elbow joint.

Mixed connective tissue disease: deep red, blurred, poicilodermatic spots and plaques; central brown discoloration, reticular scarring.

Mixed connective tissue disease: poikilodermal aspect with reticular, whitish, street-like scarring.

Mixed connective tissue disease. hyperkeratoticnail folds with elongated capillaries and focal haemorrhages. Note the splatter-like scars on the back of the fingers as well as the expression of focal, now healed scarred, cutaneous vascular occlusions.

Mixed connective tissue disease, detailed picture of hyperkeratotic nail fold with elongated capillaries and focal bleeding.

Mixed connective tissue disease: stripy livid erythema on the back of the hand and the back of the fingers, collagenosis hand.

mixed connective tissue disease: 53-year-old female patient. known for several years raynaud syndrome. episodes have become more frequent in recent months. for about 3 months, increasing fatigue, lack of drive and strength, joint pain intensified in the morning, swelling of the hands and fingers (sausage fingers). ANA: 1.1280; U1RNP antibodies+.

Mixed connective tissue disease: Ice-pick, white-atrophic scars over the finger joints after previous circumscribed (very painful) cutaneous vascular attacks.