Type I neurofibromatosis, peripheral type or classic cutaneous form. massive tumorous transformation of the skin with numerous generalized distributed, soft, skin-colored, partly pointed conical shaped neurofibromas on the left mamma. the CT examination (skull) did not reveal any pathological findings. no neurofibromas known in the family.
Type I Neurofibromatosis, peripheral type or classic cutaneous form. Since puberty slowly increasing formation of these soft, skin-coloured or slightly brownish, painless papules and nodules. Several café-au-lait spots.
Verrucae planae juveniles: Single polygonal, yellowish papules the size of a pinhead on the left forehead of a 10-year-old girl which have been added (inoculation) for weeks.
Basal cell carcinoma, pigmented. 75-year-old patient has a chronically stationary, slightly increasing, approx. 1 x 0.8 cm, brownish-black, centrally ulcerated plaque in the region of the bridge of the nose.
Papillomatosis cutis lymphostatica: Large-scale verrucous plaque with a blurred border on all sides, coarsely indurated, with formation of succulent nodules; condition following recurrent erysipelas.
lupus erythematodes chronicus discoides: 25-year-old otherwise healthy patient. variable now discrete skin lesions; for 12 months. only low photosensitivity. multiple, touch-sensitive, red, plaques. histology and DIF are typical for erythematodes, ANA and ENA negative.
Malasseziafolliculitis: disseminated, follicle-bound, inflammatory, 0.5-3 mm papules and papulopustules on the back of a 32-year-old female patient; frequent, even long-term, antibiotic therapy due to bacterial cystitis.
Acne, steroid acne. detail magnification: Disseminated, 1-4 mm large, reddish papules in a 20-year-old patient under continuous peroral steroid therapy
Detailed view: The diagnosis "pigmented basal cell carcinoma" is visible at the left margin, where the spatter-like hyperpigmentation is found (accumulation of melanin clods in the tumor parenchyma, caused by the "accompanying proliferation" of melanocytes). At the upper pole local tumor decay and ulceration.
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