
Photoallergic dermatitis L56.1
eczema, photoallergic. 51-year-old female patient. generalized skin disease with 0.2-0.4 cm large, red, slightly scaly papules (see lower margin of the picture), which have merged into flat plaques on the exposed skin areas. sudden spread. appearance within a few weeks after infection, intake of antibiotics as well as later exposure to sunlight.

Dress T88.7
DRESS: 4 weeks after taking carbemazepine, appearance of this generalized maculo-papular exanthema. onset in the face with spreading to the whole body. marked itching.

Toxic epidermal necrolysis L51.2
Toxic epidermal necrolysis: incipient extensive necrolytic detachment of the skin.

Pityriasis rubra pilaris (adult type) L44.0

Malasseziafolliculitis B36.8
Malasseziafolliculitis:disseminated, follicle-bound, itchy, inflammatory papules and papulopustules on the back of a 34-year-old female patient. skin lesions. no evidence of acne vulgaris. no formation of comedones

Candidoses B37.9
Candidoses: Female, 62 J. Candida submammary under long-term steroid-containing local therapy of an inverse psoriasis; note the marginal satellite nodules.

Fabry's disease E75.2

Pustular psoriasis L40.1
Psoriasis pustulosa generalisata: in the case of known, previously only discreetly developed psoriasis, suddenly occurring pustular exanthema with fever, arthralgias and severe disturbance of the AZ.

Nummular dermatitis L30.0
Nummular Dermatitis: Multiple, reddened, confluent, roundish or bizarrely configured plaques with weeping yellowish crusts on the back of a 76-year-old female patient.

Parapsoriasis en plaques benign small foci L41.3
parapsoriasis en plaques, benign small hereditary form. 55-year-old patient with small spotted parapsoriasis en plaques (also called chronic superficial dermatitis). the distribution pattern (fingerprint dermatosis) in the longitudinal direction of the skin tension lines is almost diagnostic. occasionally slight itching (mostly in the winter months). in summer (after sea vacation) almost healed. histology is often not conclusive.

Skabies B86
Scabies:explanatory presentation; chronic (existing for months) generalized, "eczematous", enormously itchy disease pattern with rough papules in the shape of a duct (here marked by black lines), encircling a chronically eczematized skin area without detectable duct structures.)

Pityriasis rosea L42
Pityriasis rosea. truncated, díchtes maculopapular exanthema arranged in the cleft lines, little itching.

Tinea corporis B35.4
Tinea corporis: peripheral, peripherally progressive, moderately itchy, concentric focus with fine and coarse lamellar scaling on the trunk.

Purpura pigmentosa progressive L81.7
Purpura pigmentosa progressica (type: Purpura anularis teleangiectodes): brown-red anular, by confluence also serpiginous foci. no significant itching. sporadically also largely faded only shadowy spots

Primary cutaneous marginal zone lymphoma C85.1
Primary cutaneous marginal zone lymphoma: 10 monthsago , first appearance of red, surface smooth papules and plaques in a 59-year-old patient; no scratch excoriations, no scaling, no pruritus.

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

Atrophodermia idiopathica et progressiva L90.3
Atrophodermia idiopathica et progressiva: large, red, confluent, hardly palpable, smooth, asymptomatic, shiny, brownish brownish, partly milky grey patches/plaques, slowly expanding over months.

Dermatitis herpetiformis L13.0
Dermatitis herpetiformis: chronically recurrent course of the disease; detailed picture of a urticarial plaque