
Zoster B02.9
Zoster: since 6 days increasing, left-sided headache with accompanying feeling of illness. since 3 days redness and swelling of the skin with stabbing, shooting pain. extensive erythema, blisters, scaly crusts and swelling.

Atopic dermatitis (overview) L20.-
Eczema, atopic. pronounced symmetrical infestation of the eyelids. massive permanent itching; known atopy (hay fever).

Acne (overview) L70.0
Acne papulopustulosa: disseminated follicular papules, pustules and retracted scars; recurrent course.

Nevus araneus I78.1
Naevus araneus: a filigree capillary network, which is sharply set off peripherally from the healthy skin and is radiating around a central vascular nodule.

Acne papulopustulosa L70.9
Acne papulopustulosa. juxtaposition of isolated and grouped pustules, red and whitish scars and a few comedones. moderate seborrhoea.

Basal cell carcinoma destructive C44.L
Basal cell carcinoma, destructive. overview: Since many years progressive, large-area, slightly painful, ulcerative tumor in the left half of the face of an 82-year-old patient.

Pemphigus erythematosus L10.4
Pemphigus erythematosus: clinical picture similar to chronic discoid lupus erythematosus with sharply defined scaly plaques.

Ulerythema ophryogenes L66.4
Ulerythema ophryogenes. extensive erythema with (scarred) raeration of the eyebrows. between the still persistent eyebrows are dense, fine, hairless follicular papules.

Sweet syndrome L98.2
Dermatosis, acute febrile neutrophils: Detail. 36-year-old woman with these acutely occurring, multiple, reddish-livid, succulent, pressure-sensitive papules which confluent in places.

Lupus erythematosus systemic M32.9
Systemic lupus erythematosus: multiple, chronic persistent, blurred, symmetrical, slightly burning, red (in cold environment red-livid impressing), smooth plques, variable course, activity spurts after tanning.

Morbus Morbihan L71.8
Morbihan, M.. Large red smooth spot, homogeneously affecting the whole face, chronically stationary, blurredly limited, sometimes accompanied by a feeling of tension; alternating intense redness; recurrent swelling of the eyelids.

Airborne contact dermatitis L23.8
Airborne Contact Dermatitis: chronic (>6 weeks) extensive, enormously itchy and burning eczema with irregular, extensive infestation of the exposed facial areas including the eyelids.