Image diagnoses for "Plaque (raised surface > 1cm)", "Face", "red"
83 results with 209 images
Results forPlaque (raised surface > 1cm)Facered

Dyskeratosis follicularis Q82.8
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).

Tinea faciei B35.06
Tinea faciei: 7 weeks before, a petting zoo was visited. large-area, circulatory rim-emphasized, moderately itchy (pre-treatment with glucocorticoids) plaques. detection of Tr. mentagrophytes.

Lupus erythematodes chronicus discoides L93.0
Lupus erythematodes chronicus discoides. 15 years of persistent and, despite disease-adapted therapy measures, constantly progressive skin changes in a 64-year-old patient. Large scar plate with marginal and intralesional erythema as well as isolated flat ulcers (currently covered with crust).

Darian sign
Urticaria pigmentosa of childhood: extensive redness and urticarial reaction in the lesions after mechanical irritation.

Acne papulopustulosa L70.9
Acne papulopustulosa: In acne typical distribution, red smooth and excoriated papules and some pustules.

Folliculotropic mycosis fungoides C84.0
Mycosis fungoides follikulotrope: generalised clinical picture; smooth plaques that dissect at the edges, with clear evidence of follicular involvement.

Airborne contact dermatitis L23.8
Airborne Contact dermatitis: chronic (>6 weeks) extensive, enormously itching and burning eczema with uniform infestation of the entire exposed facial area including the eyelids.

Contact acne L70.83

Lupus erythematodes chronicus discoides L93.0
Lupus erythematodes chronicus discoides: succulent, hyperesthetic plaque with adherent scaling, 2.7x3.2 cm in size, existing for 4 months, no evidence of systemic LE. DIF with typical pattern.

Seborrheic dermatitis of adults L21.9
dermatitis, adult seborrhoeic: partly small spots, partly blurred erythema with small lamellar scaly deposits. slight feeling of tension. no significant itching. skin changes have existed for years to varying degrees. in summer, clearly improved or completely disappeared.

Psoriasis vulgaris L40.00
psoriasis vulgaris. localized psoriasis. no further foci! chronic dynamic, red, rough plaque covering the entire left orbital region. in addition, in the 60-year-old woman, discrete, red, slightly scaly plaques have existed for several years on the elbows, knees, sacral region, rima ani, scalp and ears (retroauricular accentuation).

Ain D48.5

Tinea barbae B35.0
Tinea barbae. scaly, blurred, itchy erythema (incipient plaques) on the cheek and upper lip. erythema areas are sparsely interspersed with follicular papules and pustules.

Borrelia lymphocytoma L98.8
Lymphadenosis cutis benigna: painless, non-itching, calotte-shaped, firm red lump that has been present for 3 months, no scaling.

Seborrheic dermatitis of adults L21.9
Dermatitis, seborrhoeic: Flat, symmetrical (butterfly-like - DD: rosacea, systemic lupus ertyhematosus), blurred, location-constant and therapy-resistant, coarsely scaly red plaques.

Psoriasis seborrhoic type L40.8
Psoriasis seborrhoeic type: for several months constant and therapy-resistant, only slightly elevated, homogeneously filled, symmetrical, red-yellow, slightly accentuated plaques, no type I allergies detectable.

Chronic actinic dermatitis (overview) L57.1
Dermatitis chronic actinic: Chronic laminar eczema reaction which is essentially limited to the exposed skin areas Typical of chronic actinic dermatitis and thus distinguishable from a toxic light reaction (type acute solar dermatitis) is the blurred transition (eczematous scattering reactions) from lesional to healthy skin.

Acne (overview) L70.0
Acne vulgaris (overview): severe clinical picture with inflammatory papules, papulo-pustules and pustules in a 17-year-old patient; increasing course of the disease since 2 years. extensive scarring beginning in the central cheek area. picture of acne vulgaris (type: acne papulo-pustulosa, grade IV). classic indication for systemic isotretinoin therapy!