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.
Lymphomatoid papulosis: Painless, flat papules and nodules with central scaling and crust formation, appearing intermittently for more than 1 year, 0.3 - 1.2 cm in size. 45-year-old otherwise healthy male.
Circumscripts of scleroderma (plaque-type/variant: Atrophodermia idiopathica et progressiva) Survey picture of the back: size-progressive, large-area, erythematous-livid to brown, confluent, discreetly indurated spots and plaques in the area of the back in a 68-year-old female patient. In the area of the flank and the lumbar spine, clearly sclerosed plaques of whitish colour with partly distinctly atrophic surface and partly livid marginal margins are found.
Notalgia paraesthetica. unspecific picture: Since 15 years persistent, palm-sized, recurrent in irregular intervals (several months), itchy or burning, blurredly limited hyperpigmentation at the right scapula of a 78-year-old female patient; slight scaling and xerosis cutis in the described area.
Pemphigus vulgaris: multiple, chronic, since 3 years intermittent formation of large, easily injured, flaccid, 0.2-3.0 cm large, red blisters, which have united here to form larger, blister lakes.
Syphilis (early syphilis): macular, chronic exanthema. Fading erythema is also found in places. At this stage lymph node swelling is always detectable.
Keratosis benigne lichenoide: Reddish plaque of about 1.0 cm on the upper side of the right mamma of a 79-year-old female patient. The patient had noticed relatively fast growth and therefore presented with malignancy. The tissue biopsy showed a lichenoid keratosis.
Transitory acantholytic dermatosis. 6-8 weeks of slowly progressive moderately pruritic, truncal exanthema in a 53-year-old man. Red, 2-5 mm large, flat papules confluent at the sternum to plaques of about 3 cm diameter.
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