Image diagnoses for "Macule"
325 results with 1215 images
Results forMacule

Atopic photoaggravated dermatitis L20.8
Eczema, atopic photoaggravated: Chronic persistent eczema that has existed for 2 years and exacerbates under low UV exposure.

Melanotic spots of the mucous membranes L81.4
Lentigo of the mucosa: harmless lentigo of the labia minora, persisting unchanged for several years, irregular and blurred, symptom-free, brown-black lentigo of the labia minora (detailed picture) .

Vasculitis leukocytoclastic (non-iga-associated) D69.0; M31.0
Vasculitis leukocytoclastic (non-IgA-associated): multiple, for about 10 days existing, localized on both lower legs, irregularly distributed, 0.1-0.2 cm large, confluent in places, symptomless, red, smooth spots (not compressible).

Extrinsic skin aging L98.8
Chronic actinic damage to the skin: brown colouring of the leather-like thickened skin with splashes of depigmentation.

Melanotic spots of the mucous membranes L81.4
Lentigo of the mucosa: for 10 years persistent, irregular, blurred, band-shaped, almost circumferential, brown-black spots on the inner side of the labia in a 59-year-old female patient

Klippel-trénaunay syndrome Q87.2
Klippel-Trénaunay syndrome. Extensive nevus flammeus; so far no evidence of soft tissue hypertrophy. No pelvic obliquity!

Ulerythema ophryogenes L66.4
Ulerythema ophryogenes. scarring keratosis follicularis of the face with infestation of the eyebrows and cheeks of the child. primarily noticeable is the permanent (not itchy) extensive redness, which is sharply marked in the eyebrow area, but less in the cheek area. the patients do not perceive the process as a disease process but as cosmetically disturbing.

Atopic erythrodermal dermatitis L20.8
Eczema atopic (erythrodermal): severe, universal (erythrodermal) atopic eczema, exacerbation phase for about 3 months.

Phototoxic dermatitis L56.0

Melanotic spots of the mucous membranes L81.4
Lentigo of the mucosa. Acquiredactinically induced lentigo of the lower lip.

Nevus melanocytic congenital D22.-
Nevus melanocytic congenital: half-sided (checkerboard pattern of a cutaneous mosaic) localized congenital melanocytic nevus

Nail hematoma T14.05
Nail hematoma: Apparently caused by repetitive trauma (probably triggered by a trauma from frontal trauma, e.g. during a football match), transverse bleeding, the growing nail area is normally stained.

Lentiginosis L81.4
Acquired lentiginosis: acquired (solar) lentiginosis due to years of intensive UV exposure.

Asymmetrical nevus flammeus Q82.5
Nevus flammeus: harmless, congenital, asymmetric, and asymptomatic, non-syndromic (no tissue hypertrophy, no orthopedic malpositioning), telangiectatic vascular nevus .