Image diagnoses for "Plaque (raised surface > 1cm)", "white"
74 results with 270 images
Results forPlaque (raised surface > 1cm)white

Lichen sclerosus of the penis N48.0
Lichen sclerosus of the penis: persistent lichen sclerosus for years with verrucous transformation of the surface epithelium, infestation of foreskin and glans penis.

Psoriasis (Übersicht) L40.-
Psoriasis of the ear: chronically inpatient, flat whitish scaly plaques (no pre-treatment) in long-term psoriasis. 27-year-old patient.

Leukoplakia oral (overview) K13.2
DD-leukoplakia orale: verrucous retroangularely localized white plaque in lichen planus exanthematicus, i.e. small white mucous membrane papules above the larger star-shaped plaque.

Leprosy (overview) A30.9
Leprosy. tuberculoid leprosy -TT-) Well circumscribed plaque with clearly elevated edges.

Lichen planus exanthematicus L43.81
Lichen planus exanthematicus, dense, small-spotted infestation of the buccal mucosa.

Oral Lichen planus L43.8
Lichen planus mucosae. small spots (splashes) of white or opaline stains and papules of the buccal mucosa, which condense to flat plaques at the end of the teeth. the mucosal changes have been present for 6 months and do not cause any significant discomfort.

Acuminate condyloma A63.0
Condylomata acuminata. Small, brownish, partly confluent papules on the shaft of the penis.

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-white papules and plaques with a verrucous surface appear.

Psoriasis vulgaris L40.00
Psoriasis vulgaris. p soriasis of the scalp (untreated condition). Chronic stationary, disseminated, silvery scaling, large-area, adherent plaques of a previously skin-healthy 6-year-old boy, localized at the capillitium. Remark: In contrast to seborrhoeic eczema of the scalp, psoriasis exceeds the line of the hairline.

Psoriasis capitis L40.8
Psoriasis capitis: chronic, months-old, moderately sharply defined, symptom-free, whitish (scaly deposits), rough plaque with coarse surface scaling, located on the forehead and in the hairy area of the head.

Herpes simplex virus infections B00.1
herpes simplex virus infection. typical clinical finding of genital herpes simplex. in a 30-year-old patient grouped standing erosions in the area of the inner preputial leaf. burning pain. previously there were small, tightly stretched blisters instead of the erosions. several times before the patient suffered from similar skin changes.

Intermediate leprosy A30.8
Leprosy dimoprhe: tuberculoid borderline type of dimorphic leprosy with extensive hypopigmented, hardly infiltrated plaque (spot).

Lichen sclerosus (overview) L90.4
Lichen sclerosus of the axilla: large, less symptomatic, whitish, also reddish, atrophic shiny plaque; blurred, feathered border.

Tinea capitis (overview) B35.0
Tineacapitis: extensive non-treated infection of the hairy and hairless scalp by Trichophyton mentagrophytes; known HIV infection.

Lichen planus classic type L43.-
Lichen planus: Whitish, swollen, bizarrely configured, painless plaques on the cheek mucosa.

Vulvar lichen sclerosus N90.4
Lichen sclerosus of the vulva: two-dimensional, almost homogeneous sclerosing of the large and small labia, beginning atrophy of the small labia. 17-year-old female patient.
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Cheilitis actinica (overview) L57.8
Cheilitis actinica chronica, chronic stationary, sharply defined, firmly adherent, whitish keratoses on the lower lip of a 71-year-old woman with chronic Cheilitis actinica.