psoriasis seborrhoeic type: recurrent, location-constant and therapy-resistant "seborrhiasis" for several years. no evidence of atopic diseases. circumscript infestation of eyebrows, eyelids and cheeks.
psoriasis vulgaris. seborrhoid psoriasis. large, flat, red, rough plaques with fine-lamellar scaling, localized by the centrofacial system, appearing in a 26-year-old woman. similar skin changes were found on the trunk and the extensor extremities. relapsing course of the disease since adolescence.
Lupus erythematodes chronicus discoides: bizarrely limited white (follicular) scar with injected red scaly plaques with atrophic surface, adherent scaling; beginning mutilation of the auricular cartilage as a sign of deep-reaching inflammation.
Lupus erythematodes chronicus discoides: dry-scaling, red, hyperesthetic, plaques with adherent scaling that have existed on both halves of the face for 5 years; no evidence of systemic LE. DIF with typical pattern.
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).
Basal cell carcinoma sclerodermiformes: approx. 1.5 cm in diameter irritation-free, whitish plaque with conspicuous vessels running from the edge to the centre.
psoriasis vulgaris. plaque psoriasis. solitary, chronically inpatient, intermittent, sharply delineated, reddish, silvery scaly plaques localized in the face in a 6-year-old girl. erythrosquamous plaques also appear on the extensor sides of the arms and legs. symmetrical infestation. positive family history.
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