Mycosis fungoides tumor stage: Mycosis fungoides has been known for years, for about 3 months there have been intermittent attacks of less symptomatic plaques and nodules
pyodermic ulcer of the skin: moderately deep, large ulcer; characteristic are the circulatory (as if grazed) borders. ulcer smearily documented. cultural evidence of klebsielles and pseudomonas aeruginosa. the cause is a care error; no known underlying disease.
Necrobiosis lipoidica: confluent, reddish-brownish, reddish-brownish, centrally clearly atrophic, bruan-red plaques that have been present for about 3-4 years, gradually increasing in size, sharply defined, confluent, reddish-brownish, centrally clearly atrophic, bruan-red plaques, increase in consistency over the entire plaque.
Lichen amyloidosus: General view: Since several years slowly progressive findings with densely packed, skin-colored, 0.1 cm large, differently intense itching papules on the lower leg in a 34-year-old female patient.
Papillomatosis cutis lymphostatica: massive findings with papillomatous growths on the thighs; massive chronic lymphedema with deep folding of the skin above the heel region.
Churg-Strauss Syndrome. circumscribed, borderline red, in the centre brown-yellow (here beginning of infiltrate formation and regression), in the area of the red areas rough, moderately pressure tolerated plaques and nodules in a 40-year-old man. known allergic bronchial asthma and seasonal rhinitis allergica. rennet: eosinophilia 45%; IgE >1000U/ml
Spider veins. 35-year-old female patient. The linear erythema (compressible by glass spatula pressure) has been developing increasingly since the second pregnancy two years ago. Linear, red spider vein structure (linear erythema) starting from a ?source point?, which branches off in places to form a net-like formation.
Mycosis fungoides tumor stage: Mycosis fungoides has been known for years and has been present for about 3 months in this non-itching or painful plaques and nodules.
Purpura eczematide-like purpura: non-symptomatic (no itching) "eczema-like" disease that has been recurrent for months in a completely healthy patient (no history of medication).
vasculitis, leukocytoclastic (non-IgA-associated). multiple, acute, symmetric, localized on both legs for 2 weeks, symptomless, red, smooth spots and plaques. localized aspect of erythema multiforme.
Folliculotropic Mycosis fungoides: generalized picture of the disease with smooth plaques that dissect at the edges, where the follicle-relatedness is clearly recognizable.
flexural atopic eczema. skin lesions in a 13-year-old girl with intermittent course since the age of 4 years. positive FA; EA: pollinosis known. in the area of the hollow of the knee blurred, reddened, slightly scaly, moderately itchy plaques. skin field coarsened (lichenification). classic finding of flexural eczema.
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