Verrucae vulgar. up to 0.6 cm in size, skin-coloured to whitish, chronic, rough papules and nodules with a verrucous surface in the area of the finger extensor sides. autoinoculation!
Verrucae vulgares. up to 0.6 cm in size, skin-coloured to yellowish, aggregated to a wart bed, rough papules and nodules with a verrucous surface. Vitiligo known for a long time.
Granuloma anulare, subcutaneous type. 8-9 years old, developed on the stretching side, deeply situated, coarse, flat, confluent papules with indicated anular arrangement in a 38-year-old patient. Small nodules on the sides of the fingers and on the back of the hand, particularly pronounced on digitus III. Painfulness on touch or pressure as well as restriction of movement on digitus I.
Granuloma anulare, classic type . borderline, in the centre skin-coloured, smooth, painless, firm plaque with the formation of an indicated ring shape without scaling over the middle joint of the left middle finger (fingers are predilection sites). no itching.
Verrucae vulgares (detailed picture): flat wart bed with subungual infiltration. This constellation results in considerable therapeutic complications. It is important to exclude a verrucous carcinoma.
Verrucae vulgares: solitary but also densely standing, to beds aggregated, hemispherical, 0.2-0.8 cm large, coarse, mostly skin-coloured or grey-yellowish papules or nodules with fissured, hyperkeratotic-verrucous surface.
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