acrocyanosis: typical picture of the red, cold foot in a 42-year-old chain smoker. variable course. erythema not painful. occurs at an ambient temperature of 20ºC and less. also in stressful situations
Ecchymosis syndrome, painful. intermittent manifestation of painful skin bleeding in a 52-year-old manic-depressive woman. Initial development of edematous, overheated, pressure-sensitive erythema, followed by development of bleeding and slow expansion of the skin changes.
Spider veins. dark blue-red, 0.5-2.0 mm wide, tortuous varicose veins with irregular, ampulla- or nodular ectasia on the medial right thigh of a 69-year-old woman.
Vasculitis, leukocytoclastic (non-IgA-associated). multiple, petechial haemorrhages and haemorrhagic filled blisters in the area of the back of the hand and finger extensor sides. severe feeling of illness persists.
ecchymosis syndrome, painful, intermittent manifestation of painful skin bleeding in a 48-year-old man. initial development of oedematous, overheated, pressure-sensitive erythema. subsequent development of skin bleeding and slow expansion of the skin changes. scarless healing after 1-2 weeks. in the present case, there was a severely pronounced clinical picture with multiple accompanying symptoms, especially fever, weight loss, fatigue, muscle and headaches, arthralgia, epistaxis, haemoptysis and haematuria.
Acrocyanosis; diffuse reddish-livid skin discoloration of both mammae only occurring in cold weather with large-meshed marbling; reduced skin temperature; possible doughy, cushion-like swellings, symmetrical infestation, numbness and iris diaphragm phenomenon.
ecchymosis syndrome, painful. intermittent manifestation of painful, demonstrably non-traumatic induced skin bleeding in a 61-year-old woman. initial pressure-sensitive erythema. subsequent development of skin bleeding and slow expansion of the skin changes. chronic recurrent course. no underlying disease known.
Nail hematoma: sharply distally limited discoloration of the big toe nail. nail matrix at the distal cutting edge unchanged. no longitudinal striation of the nail.
Finger varicosis: chronic, stationary, no longer increasing swelling as well as tortuous and nodular, bluish phlebektasia and varices of the flexor-sided finger veins in an 89-year-old female patient. Heavily folded skin surface (skin atrophy). The clinical picture is diagnostically conclusive.
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