Image diagnoses for "Arm/Hand"
322 results with 733 images
Results forArm/Hand

Contact dermatitis allergic L23.0
Acute allergic contact dermatitis: 6 days ago, the first acute, itchy, blurred erythema on the left wrist with blistering after wearing a metal bracelet.

Candida albicans

Psoriasis palmaris et plantaris (plaque type) L40.3
Psoriasis palmaris et plantaris (plaque-type): Patient with palmar plaque psoriasis, infestation of the backs of the hands and fioniasis with striped keratotic plaques.

Cold urticaria L50.21
Coldurticaria. cold provocation test: A cold pack was applied to the patient's forearm for 20 minutes and fixed with a gauze bandage. Only a few minutes after exposure to cold, the patient reported itching, and when removing the pack, this flat urtica was clinically evident.

Lichen planus exanthematicus L43.81
Lichen planus exanthematicus: for several months persistent, itchy, generalized, dense rash with emphasis on the trunk and extremities (face not affected); as single florescence a 0.1-0.2 cm large, rounded, brown to reddish-white papules and plaques with a verrucous surface appear.

Asymmetrical nevus flammeus Q82.5
Naevus flammeus: congenital, completely symptomless vascular malformation (exclusively capillary malformation) without tendency to tissue hypertrophy.

Fixed drug eruption L27.1

Hypertrophic Lichen planus L43.81
Lichen planus verrucosus: multiple, chronically stationary, moderately sharply defined, itchy, whitish, rough papules and plaques on the backs of the hands. no scratch excoriations. reticular, white pattern of the oral mucosa.

Psoriasis arthropathica L40.50
Psoriasis arthropathica. Beginning stiffening of the distal finger joints.

Fixed drug eruption L27.1
Drug reaction, fixed: multilocular fixed drug reaction with extensive epidermolysis on sharply defined erosions in the area of the back of the hand and thumb.

Vaccinations skin changes
Influenza vaccinations, skin changes:initially blistery, later purulent local reaction after influenza vaccination.

Atopic dermatitis in children and adolescents L20.8
Eczema atopic in child/adolescent: 14-year-old child. Chronic persistent juvenile plaques. Previous atopic eczema

Purpura (overview) D65-D69
Purpura: trauma-induced older and fresh skin bleeding, in a 68-year-old patient with bronchial asthma and several years of taking a steroid-containing asthma spray,