Image diagnoses for "Plaque (raised surface > 1cm)"
581 results with 2909 images
Results forPlaque (raised surface > 1cm)

Squamous cell carcinoma of the skin C44.-
Squamous cell carcinoma in actinically damaged skin; for more than 1 year, slowly growing, bowl-shaped, very firm, little pain-sensitive, ulcerated lump, which (at the time of examination) was no longer movable on its base.

Lichen planus classic type L43.-
Lichen planus (classic type): pronounced infestation of the palms. infestation of the palms by confluence of papules and plaques. the nodular structure is especially visible in the peripheral areas.

Paget's disease of the nipple C50.0

Sézary syndrome C84.1
Sézary syndrome: universal redness with generalized lymphadenopathy; massive itching combined with pain when the integument dries out.

Hair tongue black K14.3

Acroangiodermatitis I87.2
Acroangiodermatitis. several brownish reddish, blurred plaques confluent to a large area in a 39-year-old man with CVI grade II according to Widmer. condition after phlebothrombosis 5 years ago (US fracture). marginal area see detail.

Psoriasis vulgaris L40.00
Psoriasis vulgaris: chronic inpatient, therapy-resistant, intertriginous psoriasis.

Livedo racemosa (overview) M30.8
Pronounced livedo racemosa: with a clinical course over 8 years. Extremely painful red, reticular plaques, especially at temperature change, in a 43-year-old, otherwise healthy patient. Initial findings.

Folliculotropic mycosis fungoides C84.0
Mycosis fungoides follikulotrope: 10-year-old girl with generalized folliculotropic Mycosis fungoides. foudroyant course of the disease which made a stem cell transplantation necessary

Folliculotropic mycosis fungoides C84.0
Mycosis fungoides, folliculotropic. 3-year-old clinical picture with strongly itchy, moderately sharply defined, follicular red plaques.

Lichen simplex chronicus L28.0
Lichen simplex chronicus in dark skin. 0.1-0.2 cm large, marginally disseminated, firm brown-black (red shade is missing) papules, which have confluated into a flat plaque in the centre of the lesion. Permanent itching, which increases under stress.

Melanoma cutaneous C43.-
Melanoma malignes acrolentiginous: permanently growing asymmetric irregularly coloured completely asympotmatic spot that has existed for years.

Melanoma superficial spreading C43.L
Melanoma, superficially spreading: no longer symmetrical, surface-smooth only moderately sharply defined plaque with a reflective surface.