Image diagnoses for "Leg/Foot"
404 results with 1178 images
Results forLeg/Foot

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.

Calcinosis cutis (overview) L94.2
Calcinosis cutis: blurred, centrally crusty, in places rock-hard indurated, focal painful plaque on firm palpation, surface atrophic, no longer detectable follicular structure.

Nevus pigmentosus et pilosus D22.L6

Primary cutaneous diffuse large cell b-cell lymphoma leg type C83.3
Lymphoma, cutaneous diffuse large-cell B-cell lymphoma leg type: Approx. 10-12 cm diameter, irregularly shaped, deep red tumor with a smooth surface, in a 69-year-old patient.

Collagenom storiformes D23.L
Knotig polypoides collagenoma (solitary, nodular non-pigmented lesion):
Dermatoscopy: Radially arranged, tortuous and partially branched vessels with white structureless area and white plaques.
DD: Knotig basalioma, pilomatrixoma, sebaceous gland hyperplasia.

Carcinoma of the skin (overview) C44.L
Carcinoma cutanes: advanced, flat ulcerated exophytic squamous cell carcinoma .

Ilven Q82.5
ILVEN: Linearly arranged, eczematous (histology: superficial perivascular and interstitial spongiotic dermatitis), acquired, only temporarily itchy skin change in a 6-year-old boy.

Bubble
bladder. traumatically induced subepithelial bladder in Epidermolysis bullosa simplex. 7-year-old boy, who develops blisters at the heel since the age of 3 years mainly in the warm season after simple exertion. at the upper pole a fresh bulging bladder with a slight inflammatory accompanying reaction is visible. in the picture on the left side a bladder remnant with raised bladder cover is visible. the finding speaks for a traumatic blister formation. since these blisters are induced by banal traumas a corresponding predisposition can be assumed.

Chronic prurigo L28.1
Prurigo nodularis: Multiple, chronically stationary, disseminated, isolated, sharply defined, raised, round, calotte-like, coarse, grayish grey to dirty grey, very itchy, rough nodules with a verruciform surface.

Granuloma anulare disseminatum L92.0
Granuloma anulare disseminatum: non-painful, non-itching, disseminated, large-area plaques that appeared on the trunk and extremities of a 52-year-old patient. No diabetes mellitus. No other systemic diseases known.