Kaposi's sarcoma epidemic: Dissemination of the angiosarcoma in the skin. Characteristic arrangement of the foci in the cleavage lines. In places the foci merge into larger plaques.
Eczema, photoallergic. 78-year-old female patient. Taking diuretics because of lymphedema. After first exposure to sunlight in spring, blurred erythema, reddened papules as well as flat, scaly plaques (sternal area) appeared in light-exposed areas.
Primary cutaneous marginal zone lymphoma: livid to erythematous plaques in a 64-year-old female patient, which appeared for the first time 12 monthsago . Clearly indurated efflorescences on otherwise apparently free skin. No scratch excoriations, no scaling, no pruritus.
Lupus erythematosus chronicus discoides: chronic cutaneous lupus erythematosus that has been present for several years, progressive, disseminated, scarring, chronic cutaneous lupus erythematosus, no evidence of systemic involvement (no ANA, no DNA antibodies).
Lupus erythematosus chronicus discoides: a relapsing, progressive, disseminated, scarring, chronic cutaneous lupus erythematosus that has been present for several years. No evidence of systemic involvement (no ANA, no DNA antibodies). Here is a detailed picture.
Lichen sclerosus extragenitaler: large-area lichen sclerosus of the mamma; diffuse, veil-like, only slightly increased sclerosis of the skin; not quite fresh large-area hematoma in lesioned skin. Remark: in the bradytrophic lesions of the LS, bleedings persist for an unusually long time, so that the persistent (gradually blackening hematoma) is the actual reason for a visit to the doctor.
Pemphigus erythematosus: for several years recurrent, symmetrical, little symptomatic, red, plaques with coarse lamellar scales located in the seborrheic zones.
Lupus erythematosus, subacute-cutaneous: progress photo; recurrent relapsing activities, here picture taken after a 6-year course of the disease; ANA+; anti-Ro Ak+.
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