Image diagnoses for "Oral mucosa", "white"
29 results with 73 images
Results forOral mucosawhite

Hand-foot-mouth disease B08.4
Hand-foot-mouth disease: painful 0.3-0.4 cm large, whitish blisters (arrows) on the gingiva and the skin of the lower lip, also on the hard palate.

Lichen planus mucosae L43.8
Lichen planus mucosae. 64-year-old, otherwise healthy woman. no skin lesions. mucous membrane lesions affect only the back of the tongue and the edges of the tongue or bds. whitish plaque affecting the entire surface of the tongue with an irregularly fielded surface. fruity drinks cause a burning pain and are avoided.

Lichen planus classic type L43.-
Lichen planus: Whitish, swollen, bizarrely configured, painless plaques on the cheek mucosa.

Gingivostomatitis herpetica B00.2
Gingivostomatitis herpetica. grouped standing, in places confluent aphthous changes in the area of the hard palate (circle), flat erosions on the upper lip (rectangle). gingivostomatitis herpetica in adults.

Lichen planus mucosae L43.8
Lichen planus mucosae. multiple, chronically stationary, streaky, anular and reticular, non-strippable, whitish plaques of the cheek mucosa. burning regularly occurred when eating acidic and spicy foods.

Oral hair leukoplakia K13.3
Hair leukoplakia orale. "Classic finding" with flat white plaques in the area of the lateral edge of the tongue in HIV-infected persons. The surface of the tongue is also "leukoplaked".

Chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis B37.2
candidiasis, chronic mucocutaneous (CMC). pronounced doughy and persistent swelling of the lips with several chronic rhagades in Crohn's disease. whitish, flat deposits on the base and back of the tongue. pearlèche on both sides.

Gingivostomatitis herpetica B00.2
Gingivostomatitis herpetica: Multiple, partly confluent, erosive vesicles and extensive, whitish erosions on the tongue (marked by arrows) and lower lip (encircled) in a 6-month-old boy with initial infection by herpes simplex type 1.

Lichen planus mucosae L43.8
Lichen planus mucosae: multiple, chronically active (for about 1 year), extensive, partly confluent, moderately painful, veil-like whitish plaques.

Leukoplakia oral (overview) K13.2
Oral leukoplakia: flat leukoplakia in the cheek area in heavy smokers; histological: precancerosis.

Lichen planus classic type L43.-
Lichen planus. veil-like, whitish, blurred, symptomless plaques on the posterior mucosa of the cheek.

Verruca vulgaris B07
Verrucae vulgares: linearly arranged, broad-based, white-grey, symptomatic papules (Remark: in a moist mucosal environment all cornification processes - whether inflammatory or neoplastic - turn grey-white, the cause is relatively simple: the horny layer stores a lot of water - as can be seen when bathing the palms of the hands for a longer period of time - and thus obtains this opalescent colouring, which is not transparent for the "colour red"; the normal cheek mucosa does not cornify, so it remains transparent, the red colour of the mucosa shimmers through).

Lichen planus mucosae L43.8
Lichen planus mucosae: Infestation of the mucous membrane of the mouth and the back of the tongue in the context of a generalized lichen planus of the skin; low -symptomatic, extensive and reticular whitish plaques.

Gingivostomatitis herpetica B00.2
Gingivostomatitis herpetica: Groups of standing aphthous changes in the area of the lower lip and tongue in the context of gingivostomatitis herpetica in adults.

Lichen planus (overview) L43.-
Lichen planus mucosae: whitish-grey, reticular, reticular change of the cheek mucosa.