Psoriasis palmaris et plantaris. dry keratotic plaque type. non pretreated psoriasis palmaris. in a 42-year-old man, these sharply defined, rough, hyperkeratotic plaques, which have existed permanently for months, appear in the area of the right palm.
Psoriasis palmaris et plantaris: dry keratotic plaque type. Psoriasis palmaris that has not been pretreated. 38-year-old man shows in the area of the right palm a rough, hyperkeratotic plaque with rhagades that has been permanent for years and is sharply defined.
Psoriasis palmo-plantaris. dry keratotic plaque type (only little successful pre-treatment) with sharply limited (typical is the sharp limitation to the field skin of the wrists, distinction to chronic hand eczema). painful rhagades in the skin tension lines (see ball of the hand).
Psoriasis palmaris et plantaris: dry keratotic plaque type, typical pattern of infection in palmar psoriasis with a sharp line of demarcation from normal field skin.
Psoriasis palmaris: dry keratotic plaque type, chronic flat hyperkeratosis that has led to a considerable restriction of hand movement.
Psoriasis palmaris et plantaris: dry keratotic plaque type. chronic, sharply defined (wrist), extensive, rough (scaly) plaques and rhagades. movement restrictions (pain when washing hands). it is a chronic inpatient variant of psoriasis vulgaris with manifestation on the palms of the hands and/or soles of the feet.
psoriasis of the hands: here partial manifestation of generalized psoriasis. hyperkeratotic plaques on the fingers. massive onychodystrophy (crumbly nails)
Dry keratotic plaque type Chronically active, intermittent plaques, which have existed for more than 20 years, especially on the palm of the hand, multiple, rough, partly reddish, scaly, blurred spots, plaques and rhagades in a 54-year-old man.
Dry keratotic plaque type Chronically active, intermittent plaques, plaques and rhagades in a 48-year-old man, which have been present for more than 10 years, especially on the palm and fingers, multiple, rough, red, scaly, blurred and blurred spots, plaques and rhagades.
Psoriasis of the hands (Palmae, fingers): Detailed picture with periungual infestation; here, a clear nail dystrophy is covered with an artificial nail.
Psoriasis palmaris et plantaris: Plaque type with dyshidrotic vesicles and pustules. 22-year-old man shows a sharply defined, red, rough plaque with multiple, smaller vesicles and pustules and scaling with rhagades only in the area of the small finger ball. Significant deterioration during tennis.
Psoriasis palmaris et plantaris. multiple, firm, red, rough papules and plaques with firmly adhering cap-like scaling. 14 days before, the patient had experienced a massive pustular thrust of the previously known psoriasis.
Psoriasis palmaris et plantaris: dry keratotic plaque type. Pretreated psoriasis plantaris: typical pattern of infection with flat, sharply defined red plaques with and without scaly deposits.
Psoriasis palmaris et plantaris: Plaque type with dyshidrotic vesicles. 22-year-old woman shows sharply defined, red, rough plaque with multiple, smaller itchy vesicles (no pustules) and scaling.
Psoriasis palmaris et plantaris. sharply defined plaque with blisters (lower left), rhagades and coarse lamellar scaling on an erythematous ground in the area of the planta. further foci on the lower leg.
Psoriasis palmaris et plantaris.dry keratotic (verrucous) plaque type.Massive, extensive infestation of the soles of the feet in the case of non-treated psoriasis plantaris. Note the deep rhagade formation on the heels.
Psoriasis plantaris, dry keratotic plaque type, chronic extensive hyperkeratosis which had led to a clear pain sympotism when running.
psoriasis palmaris et plantaris. dry keratotic plaque type. chronically inpatient psoriasis palmaris et plantaris known for years. massive, flat, extremely horny, rough, yellow-brown plaques in the area of the mechanically stressed areas of the sole of the foot. horn plates already detached at the edges. essential inflammatory phenomena are missing.
psoriasis palmaris et plantaris. sharply defined, clearly infiltrated, rough plaques with coarsening of the skin field. redness accentuated in the marginal area. extensive (parakeratotic) scaling. this finding is typical of non-pretreated psoriasis plantaris.
psoriasis palmaris et plantaris. hyperkeratotic changes in a 50-year-old office worker, existing for 5-6 years. painful rhaghades persisting for weeks at the edge of the heel, especially after jogging. never blisters or pustules. the inflammatory fringe at the edge of the keratosis is typical (but not proving) for psoriasis. clinical diagnosis "psoriasis plantaris" from this (mono)finding difficult. securing the diagnosis by clinical evidence of psoriasis at the contralateral heel, elbows and palms.
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