Primary cutaneous marginal zone lymphoma: 10 monthsago , first appearance of red, surface smooth papules and plaques in a 59-year-old patient; no scratch excoriations, no scaling, no pruritus.
Special form: Mycosis fungoides follikulotrope: 10-year-old girl with generalized folliculotropic Mycosis fungoides. foudroyant course of the disease which made a stem cell transplantation necessary.
Erythema gyratum repens: Detail of the rim area of the ring structure. clearly palpable (like a wet wool thread) rim area with raised, inwardly directed ruffle. striking "multizonality" with a second only discretely visible inner ring formation.
Basal cell carcinoma superficial: Slowly growing, symptom-free plaque with adherent white scales that has been present for several years; a shiny marginal structure is visible on the left margin.
Graft-versus-Host-Disease, chronic. 56 years old patient with z.n. bone marrow transplantation 2 years ago. since 1 year increasing hardening of the skin. poikilodermatic picture with extensive whitish irritations, reticular hyperpigmentation and bizarre red spots. atrophic (parchment-like) surface epithelium with fine desquamation.
Mycosis fungoides: Tumor stage. 53-year-old man with multiple, disseminated, 1.0-5.0 cm large, in places also large-area, moderately itchy, clearly consistency increased, red, rough, eroded plaques. development over 4 years.
lupus erythematosus, subacute-cutaneous: a clinical picture that has existed for several years, varying in severity and severity, no significant feeling of illness; ANA+, anti-Ro Ak+, no dsDNA-Ak.
Erythrokeratodermia figurata variabilis; detail with polycyclic, in places urticarial papules and coarse lamellar scaly ruffs; in the lower part of the picture there are anular plaques of a few days old up to 2 cm in size with a shooting-disc-like (multiform) aspect.
Pityriasis rubra pilaris (adult type) Detailed view: chronic recurrent course for years with phases of marked improvement and extensive recurrence (fig. in a thrust period).
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.