Primary cutaneous diffuse large-cell B-cell lymphoma leg type: Detail magnification: Approx. 4-5 cm diameter, irregularly shaped, bulging, deep red tumor with smooth surface of a 75-year-old patient.
Erythema multiforme: 32-year-old patient with an acutely occurring, itchy, symmetrical exanthema that has been present for a few days. 0.2-0.7 cm tall, sharply defined, firm, red, smooth papules and plaques with an indicated cocardial aspect.
Psoriasis palmaris et plantaris (plaque type): red and scaly, markedly indurated plaques on the palm of the hand. Sharp border to the flexor side of the forearm. This sharp transition to the unaffected skin differentiates palmar psoriasis from "hand eczema".
Atopiceczema in children/adolescents: 3-year-old toddler with previously known atopic eczema; for several weeks increasing severe eczematization with excruciating itching, elevated nummular (also borderline) crusty and weeping plaques; evidence of gram-positive coccus.
Erythema anulare centrifugum: chronically active, centrifugally growing, ubiquitous (here localized on the trunk), red, smooth, solid, confluent anular plaques, the edges of which are palpable like a wet "wool thread".
Psoriasis vulgaris. p soriasis of the scalp (untreated condition). Chronic stationary, disseminated, silvery scaling, large-area, adherent plaques of a previously skin-healthy 6-year-old boy, localized at the capillitium. Remark: In contrast to seborrhoeic eczema of the scalp, psoriasis exceeds the line of the hairline.
Parapsoriasis en plaques, large-hearth inflammatory form. general view: For the first time in the 39-year-old woman multiple, itchy, erythematous, brownish, partly scaly, partly confluent plaques appeared at the gluteal region during pregnancy. These spread to the legs in the course of the disease. transition from parapsoriasis en plaques to mycosis fungoides in the patch stage.
Nevus, melanocytic, congenital. 6 x 4 mm large, brownish pigmented nevus in the area of the left small toe in a 3-month-old girl. Regular clinical control is necessary. Excision planned at the age of >10 years.
Psoriasis: psoriatic minus variant of the lips (psoriasis is detected by typical psoriatic plaques on the elbows and knees); discrete foci on the upper lip marked by arrows and a circle.
infant hemangioma. chronic dynamic, massive growth within the last 6 weeks, clearly increased in consistency, confluent red plaque and nodules. 6-month-old boy. no ocular functional impairment. beginning regression of the hemangioma recognizable by the grey veils over the different parts of the hemangioma (e.g. in the area of the lower plaque).
Granuloma fissuratum. 70-year-old patient has had a reddened, pressure-sensitive, exophytically growing plaque with a central, somewhat elongated, weeping indentation for several months. The skin change exists exactly in the pressure area of the spectacle frame.
psoriasis palmaris et plantaris (plaquet type): palmo-plantar psoriasis known for years. no pre-treatment. extensive, sharply limited erythema. circumscribed partly stripy hyperkeratotic plaques. single deep rhagades.
Lichen planus verrucosus with transition into a lichen palnus ulzerosus: verrucous and hyperkeratotic lichen planus of both feet and lower legs, existing for several years, and for several months flat deep ulcers without any healing tendency.
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