Teleangiectasia macularis eruptiva perstans. 58-year-old patient with a generalized, spot-like clinical picture which has existed for years and shows a constant progression. Itching during sweat-inducing efforts and mechanical exposure of the affected skin areas. Bizarre teleangiectatic vascular convolutions are characteristic.
Urticaria pigmentosa: about 0.5-1.0cm large, disseminated, oval or round, brownish-red spots. only when rubbed, increased reddening of the spots with accompanying itching. also during warm showers or baths increased reddening and clearly palpable elevation of the lesions. Darier phenomenon can be triggered (see neck on the right, here extensive reddening with slight itching, after rubbing this area).
Eczema user, atopic. brownish, dry, scaly and itchy plaques on lichenified ground. 16-year-old female patient. infestation of the large joint bends as well as seizure-like, tormenting itching.
Systemic lupus erythematosus: acute maculopapular exanthema, accompanied by recurrent fever attacks, fatigue and exhaustion, arthralgia, inflammation parameters +, ANA high titer positive, rheumatoid factor +, DNA-AK+. UV-relatedness of the exanthema is not detectable.
Dermatitis contact allergic: chronic itchy dermatitis with blurred reddish-brown plaques, HV has been shown to be caused by multiple hair dyeings with a hair dye containing para-phenylenediamine.
Dermatitis contact allergic: Recurrence with previously known sensitization by para-phenylenediamine; now renewed hair coloration with acute exacerbation of the "former" dermatitic plaques.
Vascular (capillary) malformation (naevus flammeus): Congenital, generalized, symptomless, spotty erythema on the face and trunk in a 9-year-old boy, developed according to age.
Dyskeratosis follicularis: disseminated, chronically stationary, 0.1-0.2 cm in size, flatly elevated, moderately firm, non-itching, rough, red, scaly papules which unite at the top to form a blurred plaque; skin lesions have existed in varying degrees in this 53-year-old patient for several years.
Sarcoidosis nodular form: several, for about 2 years existing, so far continuously grown, symptomless, surface-smooth, skin-coloured, firm nodules; here symptomless nodular change in the neck region.
Psoriasis capitis: chronic, months-old, moderately sharply defined, symptom-free, whitish (scaly deposits), rough plaque with coarse surface scaling, located on the forehead and in the hairy area of the head.
Graft-versus-Host-Disease: chronic. 1.5 years after stem cell transplantation, large-area, scleroderma skin changes. significant increase of the poikiloderma skin areas in the exposed zones. significant reduction of the AZ
Pseudoxanthoma elasticum: Dermatoscopic picture of the right neck with translucent, yellowish-white solitary and also confluent "cotton-wool-like" discolorations which correspond to the elastotic collagen alterations of the dermis.
Airborne Contact Dermatitis: Subacute, blurred, red plaque. the blurred transition to the non-free skin areas is marked by the oval and arrows. in case of toxic dermatitis, a sharply defined marking line would be expected.
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