Image diagnoses for "Leg/Foot"
401 results with 1174 images
Results forLeg/Foot

Necrobiosis lipoidica L92.1
Necrobiosis lipoidica: Overview of the left thigh: Approx. 3 cm large, slightly elevated, erythematous plaque without ulcerations.

Hypertrophic Lichen planus L43.81
Lichen planus verrucosus. solitary, chronically stationary, for months unchanged, very itchy, 5.0 cm large, rough, red, verrucous plaques on the lower leg. a highly chronic course over years is to be expected.

Tinea pedis (overview) B35.30
Tinea pedum (moccasin type). general view: For about 13 years non-healing redness and scaling, partly with severe itching, in the area of the right foot in a 30-year-old female patient. sharply defined, marginal scaling erythema, pustular formation, swelling of the foot with limited walking ability.

Asteatotic dermatitis L30.8
Desiccation dermatitis: slight, pityriasiform scaling with a characteristic craquelée pattern with linear cracking

Erysipelas bullous
Erysipelas bullöses: acuteextensive, sharply defined, painful reddening and plaque with circumscribed large blisters; entry portal: tinea pedum.

Lichen sclerosus extragenital L90.0
Lichen sclerosus extragenitaler: white plaque with a shiny surface, existing for several months, completely without symptoms, slowly progressive; differential diagnosis is to exclude a morphea (histological confirmation).

Tinea cruris B35.8
Tinea cruris: chronic plaque that is slightly faded in the centre, accentuated at the edges, covering a large area and moderately itchy.

Tinea pedis (overview) B35.30
Tinea pedum, detail enlargement: Sharply defined, marginal scaly erythema, pustular formation, scaly seam along the edge of the foot and multiple scratch excoriations, some of which are crusty.

Drug reaction lymphocytic T88.7
drug reaction, lymphocytes: multiple, non-symptomatic, surface-smooth papules and plaques. occurred several months after cardiological readjustment. patient otherwise healthy. no evidence of lymphatic systemic disease. no other drugs. histological: nodular, mature lymphocytic tissue. no lymph follicles.

Erythema infectiosum B08.30
Erythema infectiosum: partly anular partly reticular erythema on the lower extremity.

Komedo L73.8
Comedone-like keratosis follicularis (see there): in contrast to classical comedones, keratosis follicularis lacks sebaceous gland hyperplasia ; keratosis follicularis is a follicular, "dry horn graft" which does not occur in the seborrhoeic zones but mainly on the side of the extremities.

Pseudoleukoderma psoriaticum L81.5
Pseudoleucoderma psoriaticum. white coloration of the skin during cignolin therapy of psoriasis vulgaris. spontaneous regression occurred within 10 days.

Purpura pigmentosa progressive L81.7
Purpura pigmentosa progressiva: aetiologically unexplained (medication?) pronounced clinical picture that has been changing for several months with symmetrically distributed, disseminated, non-itching, yellow-brown, spots (detailed picture).

Venous leg ulcer I83.0

Chronic prurigo L28.1
Prurigo nodularis: Condition before and after 8 months of Dupilumab therapy (image varied and taken from: Wieser JK et al. 2020)

Dyshidrotic dermatitis L30.8
eczema, dyshidrotic: chronic recurrent, hyperkeratotic eczema of the hands and feet. here changes of the sole of the foot. recurrent episodes with itchy blisters. no signs of atopy. no contact allergy. no atopic diathesis.

Erythema migrans A69.2
Erythema chronicum migrans. large plaque, which has been growing steadily on the periphery for about 8 months, only slightly increased in consistency, homogeneously brownish in the centre, somewhat atrophic, marked by an increasingly consistent erythema zone at the edges. only occasionally "slight pricking" in the lesional skin.

Purpura pigmentosa progressive L81.7
Purpura pigmentosa progressiva: aetiologically unexplained (medication probably) distinct clinical picture with symmetrically distributed, disseminated, anular, non-itching, red-brown (cannot be pushed away), spots (detailed picture).