Addison's disease: the palms of the previously described patient. pigmentation of the palm lines as well as the finger wrinkles. hyperpigmentation at traumatized areas typical for Addison's disease (here: calluses)
Acromegaly: 43-year-old patient with known acromegaly. Noticeable increase in size of the lower extremities. Simultaneous development of excessive varicosis with consecutive chronic venous insufficiency (CVI).
Bubbles: areal blistering in Cheiropompholyx. 32-year-old female patient complaining of recurrent blistering on the lateral edges of the fingers. In a very warm outside temperature massive, at first itchy, later painful blistering occurred. Smaller blisters appearing only in the area of the palms (groin skin) (left margin of the picture), which first form flat blister aggregates and then merge into large, blurred blisters (middle of the picture).
Verrucous squamous cell carcinoma of the palm. solitary, chronically stationary, exophytic, hemispherical, dirty brown nodules localized on the palm of the right hand, approx. 0.4 cm in size, with a coarse consistency, on an approx. 1.5 x 2.0 cm oval, mostly sharply defined, rough, red, verrucously fissured, symptomless plaque.
Carcinoma, verrucous. Chronically stationary, slightly increasing in the last 10 years, coarse plaque with dry, dirty yellow or brownish, torn, rough, crusty fissured, verrucous surface.
carcinoma, verrucous. detailed view of the chronically stationary skin change. the dry, dirty yellow, torn, rough, crusty, fissured, verrucous surface of the plaque is easy to recognize. the skin change has grown only slowly within the last 10 years.
Dyskeratosis follicularis: Infestation of the palms of the hands; in central areas of the palm flat, common keratoses, at the ball of the thumb about 0.1-0.2 cm large, glassy papules.
Dermatitis, dyshidrotic: dense, partly solitary, partly confluent vesicles and pustules (edge of the hand); 0.1-0.2 cm large disseminated brown, hardly raised papules and plaques with and without adherent scaling in the middle of the hand; itching and slight pain.
Eczema, dyshidrotic skin changes affecting both palms, chronically recurrent, partly vesicular, partly flat erosive, partly hyperkeratotic skin changes with formation of rhagades, which are particularly pronounced at the finger ends.
Eczema, dyshidrotic. detail: Strongly pronounced, hyperkeratotic skin changes on the palm of the hand with massive formation of erosions, rhagades and vesicles.
Eczema, hyperkeratotic rhagadiform eczema of the hands and feet. 3-year-old man: 3-year-old man with a chronic recurrent, blurred, flat, yellowish-brown, rough, strong, scaly plaques on the left hand of a 21-year-old man; several small, painful rhagades and smaller artifactual excoriations are visible.
Eczema, hyperkeratotic-rhagadiform eczema of the hands and feet. detail enlargement: multiple, chronically recurrent, blurred, flat, yellowish-brown, rough plaques and rhagades on the right thumb of a 21-year-old man which appeared for the first time 3 years ago. dorsal on the thumb and on the back of the hand several, flat, blurred, red, rough spots are visible.
eczema, hyperkeratotic-rhagadiform eczema of the hands and feet. multiple, chronically stationary, on palms disseminated, up to 3.0 cm in size, blurred, rough, itchy, burning when washing, grey, rough plaques. in addition there are rhagades.
Epidermolysis bullosa simpex, Weber-Cockayne: Epidermolysis bullosa simpex, Weber-Cockayne: visible blistering or only simple detachment of the epidermis after trivial traumas. Scarless healing.
Erythema palmare et plantar symptomaticum, detail: In this 47-year-old patient with demonstrably elevated cholestasis values and increased telangiectasia of the upper part of the body a blurred, chronically stationary, flat reddening of the right hypothenar bale was observed.
Herpes simplex virus infection: Inoculation herpes simplex, a manifestation of herpes simplex infection in the fingers or palms of medical professionals or wrestlers.
Herpes simplex virus infection: Inoculation herpes simplex, the site of manifestation (as well as fingers or palms) of a herpes simplex infection occurs in medical professionals or wrestlers.
Cutaneous mosaic dermatosis: In a 7-year-old girl erythematosquamous, hyperkeratotic papules and plaques exist in a linear and planar arrangement since birth.
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