Angioedema, acquired, renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system blocker-induced. Acute, bulging, elastic, edematous swelling of the entire lower lip and also slight involvement of the buccal mucosa. Occurs for the first time a few weeks after starting antihypertensive medication with an ACE inhibitor.
Hyalinosis cutis et mucosae, detailed picture: protruding papillae of the tongue, which are aggregated in the posterior part of the tongue to form verrucous beds.
Zoster: 25-year-old HIV-infected patient. zoster since 5 days. segmentally distributed vesicles and blisters on reddened surrounding skin. on the left side condition after cured zoster disease with bizarre scars.
mononucleosis, infectious. swallowing difficulties for 5-6 days; fever > 39 °C. generalized, non-itchy exanthema for 1 day. painful regional lymph nodes (neck, throat). little itchy, urticarial, small spots, confluent exanthema in places with clear accentuation of the face. no enanthema! paul bunnel reaction positive. IgG antibodies against epstein-barr virus, fourfold increase in titer every 10-14 days. detection of epstein-barr virus dna via PCR is positive.
Scleroderma systemic: edematous swelling of the hands and fingers. when stretching the fingers, white discoloration of the tense skin areas (see right index finger) occurs. Raynaud's syndrome known for several years. increased sensitivity to cold, rheumatoid joint complaints, ANA:1:620; SCL70AK+.
Panaritium, which developed in an HIV-infected patient approximately 3 months after a previously successful antiretroviral therapy with the protease inhibitor indinavir.
Fasciitis, necrotizing. foudroyant running, primarily underestimated, highly painful clinical picture with high fever and massive swelling of the left hand. Patient with several years of immunosuppressive therapy.
Melkersson-Rosenthal syndrome (monsymptomatic form; here Blepharitis granulomatosa): initially recurrent, now permanent swelling of the left upper lid; no lingua plicata; no neurological symptoms.
Lymphedema, type Nonne-Milroy. detailed enlargement of the left foot: edematous swelling of the back of the toes with transverse skin folds over the metatarsophalangeal joints (positive Malleus sign).
Erysipelas, acute: under high fever, , within 2 days appeared, sharply limited flat, saturated redness and plaque formation of the left buttock. accompanying: painful regional lymphadenitis.
Herpes simplex virus infection: Solitary or grouped standing, 1-3 mm large, formerly tightened, but now burst vesicles on erythematous skin on the scrotum and penis of an 8-month-old, otherwise healthy infant.
Zoster generalisatus (with drug-induced immunosuppression): For 5 days increasing redness and swelling of the skin with stabbing, shooting pain. extensive erythema, blisters, scaly crusts and swelling. > 25 blisters beyond the segmental infestation.
Please login to access all articles, images, and functions.
Our content is available exclusively to medical professionals. If you have already registered, please login. If you haven't, you can register for free (medical professionals only).
Please complete your registration to access all articles and images.
To gain access, you must complete your registration. You either haven't confirmed your e-mail address or we still need proof that you are a member of the medical profession.