Candida granuloma. chronic recurrent nodular cutaneous-subcutaneously localized, deep-reaching, livid inflammatory foci on the wrist of an immunocompromised, 28-year-old patient. abundant C. albicans detectable in the smear. development of new nodules despite oral antimycotic medication. partial healing leaving post-inflammatory pigmentation.
Calciphylaxis, cutaneous. 13-month-old, chronically progressive, painful, coarse, partly ulcerated, red to livid plaques on the lower leg of a 58-year-old woman. The surrounding area is partly changed in a livedo manner.
drug reaction, lymphocytes: multiple, non-symptomatic, surface-smooth papules and plaques. occurred several months after cardiological readjustment. patient otherwise healthy. no evidence of lymphatic systemic disease. no other drugs. histological: nodular, mature lymphocytic tissue. no lymph follicles.
Dermatitis herpetiformis: multiple, disseminated, eminently chronic, itchy, prickly, scratched excoriations, few vesicles (note: the vesicles must be sought in DhD).
Lichen planus exanthematicus: an itchy exanthema that has existed for about several months with barely pinhead-sized, slightly raised, partly isolated but also aggregated to larger plaques, smooth, shiny, red papules.
Dermatitis herpetiformis. disseminated, mostly eroded papules (vesicles not detectable here!) on the elbow and the extensor side of the forearm. recurrent course for months with tormenting, prickly itching.
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