Image diagnoses for "Leg/Foot"
397 results with 1164 images
Results forLeg/Foot

Purpura thrombocytopenic M31.1; M69.61(Thrombozytopenie)
Purpura thrombocytopenic: line shaped, fresh skin bleeding (diascopically not pushable away) after intensive scratching.

Sarcoidosis of the skin D86.3
sarcoidosis: subcutaneously knotty form of sarcoidosis. recurrent course for several years. development of slightly pressure-painful nodules in the subcutaneous fatty tissue. known lung sarcoidosis stage II. skin findings: subcutaneously located, bulging nodules and plates, which can be clearly distinguished from the surrounding area and can be moved on the support. the skin above is partly reddened (see figure), partly unchanged.

Nodular vasculitis A18.4
Erythema induratum (Nodular vasculitis): The 48-year-old patient has been suffering for 2 years from these intermittent, moderately painful, therapy-resistant plaques which tend to ulceration.

Idiopathic guttate hypomelanosis L81.5
Hypomelanosis guttata idiopathica: Disseminated, different sized, roundish, white patches on the lower leg of a 63-year-old female patient.

Circumscribed scleroderma L94.0
Scleroderma circumscripts (plaque type). chronic, sharply defined, clearly indurated, whitish atrophic, smooth plaques with surrounding blue-violet to lilac resterythema (lilac ring). the individual plaques expand centrifugally increasingly and fade centrally. subjectively, there is only a slight feeling of tension.

Lichen planus classic type L43.-
Lichen planus. chronically active, multiple, disseminated or confluent, increasing, first appearing about 6 months ago, mainly localized at the outer edge and back of the foot, 0.3-0.6 cm large, itchy, red, smooth, shiny papules in a 46-year-old woman. Furthermore, a whitish, reticular pattern of the buccal mucosa of the mouth was visible.

Purpura eczematid-like purpura L81.7
Purpura eczematide-like purpura: non-symptomatic (no itching) eczema-like disease that has been recurrent for months in a completely healthy patient (no history of medication).

Psoriasis palmaris et plantaris (pustular type)
psoriasis palmaris et plantaris (pustular type): extensive erythema of the entire palm. sharply limited towards the wrist. mixed type with numerous pustules and dyshidrotic vesicles. coarse lamellar desquamation.

Tinea cruris B35.8
Tinea cruris: inflammatory plaque with a smooth, tense surface and follicular crusts.

Lichen planus exanthematicus L43.81
Lichen planus exanthematicus: for several months persistent, itchy, generalized, dense rash with emphasis on the trunk and extremities (face not affected); as single florescence a 0.1-0.2 cm large, rounded, brown to reddish papule with a smooth but also woolly surface appears.