Psoriasis pustulosa palmaris et plantaris: flat erythema of the palm of the hand. sharp abscess towards the wrist. multiple different efflorescences: scaly papules and small plaques, vesicles, pustules, raised scales. episodic progression. considerable itching.
psoriasis palmaris et plantaris (plaque type): chronic inpatient type. deeply drawn hand lines. there is a risk of rhagade formation here. oval encircles the sharp marking zone to the wrist. arrows mark the edges of the psoriatic plaques.
Pustulosa pustulosa palmaris et plantaris. multiple pustules, occurring in the course of a psoriatic episode, localized on a sharply defined red plaque on the left palm of the hand. no general symptoms. similar skin lesions were found on the soles of the feet
Pustulosis palmaris et plantaris: acutely occurring, disseminated, 0.2-0.4 cm large, smooth yellowish pustules next to older, dried brown spots; neither history nor clinical evidence of psoriasis.
Pustulosis palmaris et plantaris: multiple, acute, disseminated, 0.2-0.4 cm large, smooth yellowish pustules next to older, dried-up brown spots on the palm of a 42-year-old man. Occurs on both palms in an acute, febrile streptococcal angina.
Pustulosis palmaris et plantaris: massive (sterile), painful pustulosis of the soles of the feet after a febrile (streptococcal) infection. solitary, also grouped pustules, in places conflated to form larger "pus lakes". associated, pressure-painful arthritis (swelling) of the sternoclavicular joints.
Pustulosis palmaris et plantaris: massive (sterile), painful pustulosis of the soles of the feet after a febrile (streptococcal) infection. large pustules, in places confluent to form larger "pus puddles". associated pressure-painful arthritis (swelling) of the sternoclavicular joints
Pustulosis palmaris et plantaris: marked by square: fresh and older pustules. The two upper pustules with collateral erythema. Marked by arrows: brown, flat papules, as remains of older dried pustules.
Hand-foot-mouth disease. few, acute, painful, polygonal vesicles with a red courtyard. unspecific flu-like prodromies that had persisted about 2 weeks before.
For a long time, this coarse lamellar scaling, slightly increased in consistency, large-area, hardly itchy plaque has existed in the 50-year-old patient.
For a long time now, this large, "well-cared for", low-consistency, borderline, sometimes itchy plaque (interval-like local treatment with corticosteroids) has existed in the 42-year-old patient.
Bowen's disease: chronically stationary, slowly increasing in area and thickness, sharply defined, now clearly (knot formation), symptom-free, red, rough, sometimes scaly and crusty plaque on the palm of the hand.
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