Tuberculosis cutis luposa: The 32-year-old Syrian has an irregularly limited, symptom-free, skin-coloured, sunken scar with marginal aggregated, painless, verrucous, brown plaques.
Sarcoidosis plaque form: Pla que that has existed for about 1 year and has grown continuously up to now, without symptoms, fine lamellar scaling, brown-reddish, blurred edges; in the slightly reddened peripheral area, small firm nodules are palpated.
Granuloma faciale: Multiple, reddish-brown, blurred and irregularly configured, symptomless plaque in a 52-year-old man. No known secondary diseases, no drug anemia. The finding has been present for several months and is slowly progressive. Detailed view of multiple facial plalues.
Granuloma faciale: Red-brown, blurred and irregularly configured, symptomless plaque in a 52-year-old man. Clearly pronounced follicle accentuation. No known secondary diseases, no medication anmnesia. The finding has existed for several months and is slowly progressive. Detailed picture of multiple plaques in the face.
Verruca seborrhoica. soft, raised, grey-brown to black papules and plaques with a fissured, warty surface, interspersed with black horn stoppers. variable size, from a few mm to about 1.2 cm in diameter. disseminated appearance.
Lichen planus actinicus: anularsmaller lesions and merged into larger map-like borderline plaques; in the prominent borderline area the violet shade of lichen "ruber" is found.
sarcoidosis: anular or circine chronic sarcoidosis of the skin. existing for about 5 years. onset with papules the size of a pinhead (see middle of the cheek) with appositional growth and central healing. no detectable systemic involvement. findings: asymptomatic, brown to brown-red, borderline, centrally atrophic, little infiltrated, confluent lesions in the face in several places.
melanosis neurocutanea. multiple, sharply defined, pigmented, black spots, plaques and nodules on head, upper extremities and upper trunk. in the area of the middle and lower trunk there is a large melanocytic nevus. evidence of leptomeningeal melanosis.
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