Dermatosis, acute febrile neutrophils: Detail. 36-year-old woman with these acutely occurring, multiple, reddish-livid, succulent, pressure-sensitive papules which confluent in places.
Airborne Contact Dermatitis: chronic (>6 weeks) extensive, enormously itchy and burning eczema with irregular, extensive infestation of the exposed facial areas including the eyelids.
Dermatitis, seborrhoeic: chronically recurrent disease with constant, blurred, sometimes slightly itchy, red spots and plaques; distinctly bds. eyelid eczema
keratosis pilaris syndrome. keratosis pilaris syndrome with ulerythema ophryogenes. small, follicularly bounded hyperkeratoses in the area of the lateral eyebrows, the forehead-hairline and in the cheek area. erythema in the area of the eyebrows with hair loss and without scaling. sometimes slight itching.
Tinea faciei. multiple, chronically active, since 4 weeks flatly growing, disseminated, 0.5-3.0 cm large, blurred, itchy, red, rough (scaling) papules and plaques as well as few yellowish crusts
Lupus erythematosus acute-cutaneous: symmetrical red spots, patches and plaques in the face, neck and upper trunk areas that have been present for several weeks.
Dermatitis chronic actinic. detail enlargement: Disseminated, scratched papules and nodules as well as blurred, large-area, red, sharply itching fine-lamellar scaling spots and plaques in the face of a 51-year-old female patient with atopic eczema existing since birth.
lupus erythematodes chronicus discoides: 13-year-old otherwise healthy patient. skin lesions since 6 months, gradually increasing, no photosensitivity. several, centrofacially localized, chronically stationary, touch-sensitive (slight pain when stroking with a wooden spatula), red, slightly scaly plaques. histology and DIF are typical for erythematodes. ANA and ENA negative.
Anticonvulsant hypersensitivity syndrome. 4 weeks after the start of anticonvulsant therapy suddenly appeared, severe clinical picture with fever and exanthema, generalized lymphadenopathy, increase in liver values, leukocytosis with neutrophilia as well as eosinophilia. Uniform, scaling, painful facial redness.
Dyskeratosis follicularis. reflected light microscopy: section of a lesion on the neck. yellowish-white keratin plaques (orthohyperkeratosis) and areas with ball-shaped, ectatic central capillaries (acantholysis area).
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