Image diagnoses for "Lip region"
91 results with 237 images
Results forLip region

Lichen planus mucosae L43.8
Lichen planus mucosae: discrete infestation of the lower lip, no subjective symptoms.

Hypertrophic Lichen planus L43.81
Lichen (planus) verrucosus: Detail view with verrucous plaques on the lips.

Lichen planus mucosae L43.8
Lichen planus mucosae: a disorderly transformation of the lesions on the lips and oralmucosa.

Lichen planus mucosae L43.8
Lichen planus mucosae: erosive Lichen planus mucosae with painful erosive cheilitis.

Lichen planus mucosae L43.8
Lichen planus of the lip red. white-striped, not wipeable, smooth spot and plaque formation of the lip red with some erosive parts. distinct sensitivity to touch. secondary findings: reticular, whitish plaques of the buccal mucosa.

Lichen planus erosivus mucosae L43.8
Lichen planus mucosae: chronic, erosive Lichen planus mucosae with painful erosive cheilitis.

Vascular malformations Q28.88
Malformations vascular (non-syndromal, mixed, capillary/venous): Congenital vascular malformation, initially only imposing as a red spot, which showed constant thickness growth over the years, clinically asymptomatic (occasional increased bleeding when biting on it).

Erythema multiforme, minus-type L51.0
erythema multiforme: recurrent exanthema with cocard-like plaques for several years. the skin changes occurred shortly after the appearance of a herpes simplex labialis. figure with healing phase of the herpes simplex infection.

Cheilitis granulomatosa G51.2
Cheilitis granulomtosa: Monosymptomatic orofacial granulomatosis. solitary, chronic, recurrent for months, clearly increased consistency, smooth swelling of the upper lip accompanied by a feeling of tension. no lingua plicata. no facial paresis.

Cheilitis contact allergic K13.0
Cheilitis contact allergic: tensed and touch-sensitive and clearly indurated lip red with radial furrows. transition to lip skin blurred. lip skin reddened, lichenified and scaly in places

Basal cell carcinoma (overview) C44.-
Basal cell carcinoma: inconspicuous, nodular, centrally flat ulcerated nodule covered with a thin brownish crust, completely painless, flat nodule. Marginal area reaching up to the red of the lips. Drawing of the operation scheme.

Vascular malformations Q28.88
Malformations, vascular: mixed venous/capillary malformation with ectatic venous and capillary vessel convolutions at the lip.

Carcinoma of the skin (overview) C44.L
Carcinoma of the skin: a continuously growing lip carcinoma that has existed for years.

Cheilitis actinica chronica; chronische aktinische Cheilitis; L57.8
Cheilitis actinica chronica: uniform, laminar leukoplakia of the upper and lower lip with a tendency to rhagade formation; keratotic deposits in the area of the lower lip occur more and more often.

Cheilitis granulomatosa G51.2
Cheilitis granulomatosa: initially recurrent, now chronic persistent swelling of the upper and lower lip.

Atrophy senile of the skin L90.8
Atrophy, senile: age-related involution of the skin of the lips with pronounced radial furrow formation; beginning involution of the red of the lips.

Atrophy senile of the skin L90.8
Combined intrinsic and extrinsic involution of the lip skin with radial and rhomboidal furrow formation of the lip and chin region; vitiligo of the lip red and the immediately adjacent lip skin.

Stevens-johnson syndrome L51.1
Stevens-Johnson syndrome: acute, extensive, painful erosions of the red of the lips, the lip mucosa, the tongue and the gingiva in an 18-year-old woman.

Pemphigus diseases (overview) L10.-
Pemphigus vulgaris: 63-year-old patient with a pemphigus vulgaris (mucocutaneous type) which has existed for 3 years.

Lupus erythematodes chronicus discoides L93.0
Chronic cheilitis in lupus erythematosus chronicus discoides: chronically active, red, hyperesthetic plaques with adherent scaly deposits on the lip red of the upper and lower lip; focal areas affected are lip red and lip skin.

Lupus erythematodes chronicus discoides L93.0
Chronic cheilitis in lupus erythematosus chronicus discoides. Chronically active, red, hyperesthetic plaques with adherent scaly deposits on the lip red of the upper and lower lip.

Lupus erythematodes chronicus discoides L93.0
Chronic cheilitis in lupus erythematosus chronicus discoides: chronically active, red, hyperesthetic plaques with adherent scaly deposits on the lip red of the upper and lower lip; focal areas affected are lip red and lip skin.

Stevens-johnson syndrome L51.1
Stevens-Johnson syndrome: acute with accompanying fever, occurred extensive, painful erosions of the red of the lips, lip mucosa and tongue in a 17-year-old woman. A few days later multiromic exanthema of the runp and face. The cause was probably the intake of ibuprofen.