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Café Au Lait Macules (Spots) in a Patient Who Has Neurofibromatosis Type 1.
More Pronounced Erythematous to Violaceous Patches in Juvenile Dermatomyositis on the Face of a Child with a Darker Skin Tone Than the Patient Shown in Figure 118.1.
Morphea of the Thigh. An Ivory-Colored Indurated Plaque with Surrounding Peripheral Erythema.
Mosquito Bites.
Multiple Annular Plaques with Dusky Atrophic Centers on the Face and Scalp of This 1-Month-Old with Neonatal Lupus Erythematosus. The Mother Had No Previous History of Connective Tissue Disease but Later Received a Diagnosis of Systemic Lupus Erythematosus. Her Subsequent Pregnancy Resulted in a Second Child with Cutaneous Neonatal Lupus Erythematosus.
Multiple Café Au Lait Macules in a Child Who Has Neurofibromatosis Type 1.
Multiple Café Au Lait Macules in a Child with Skin of Color. The Lesions are Somewhat Darker Than in Individuals with a Lighter Skin Tone.
Multiple Café Au Lait Macules in a Patient Who Has Neurofibromatosis Type 1.
Calcinosis Cutis of the Fourth Finger as Well as Gottron Papules on the Knuckles in This Patient with a Long History of Juvenile Dermatomyositis.
Candidal Diaper Dermatitis in an Infant with Skin of Color. There are Erythematous Patches Involving the Convexities and Skinfolds and Satellite Papules. Postinflammatory Hypopigmentation is Present on the Medial Thighs.
Cercarial Dermatitis. There are Erythematous Papules on the Patient’s Back.
Characteristic Shiny, Hypopigmented, Atrophic Plaques of the Vulvar Region with Associated Ecchymosis.
Chronic Atopic Dermatitis in the Antecubital Fossa in a Patient with Skin of Color.
Chronic Paronychia Caused by Candida. In Addition to Periungual Erythema and Cuticle Loss, Note the Dystrophy of the Nail Plates.
Chronic Paronychia Caused by Candida. There is Periungual Erythema and Loss of the Cuticle.
Circumferential Hypopigmented Atrophic Patches in a Figure 8 Configuration Characteristic of Lichen Sclerosus.
Multiple Ecchymoses in a Young Child with Oculocutaneous Albinism in the Setting of Hermansky-Pudlak Syndrome.
Multiple Erythematous and Purple Tender Toes in an Adolescent with Pernio.
Multiple Milia with Scarring over the Dorsal Aspect of the Hand and Fingers of a 1-Year-Old with Dominant Dystrophic Epidermolysis Bullosa.
Multiple Small Nail Pits May be Observed in Patients Who Have Alopecia Areata.
Multiple Small Vesicles Overlying an Erythematous Plaque in a Patient Exposed to Poison Ivy.
Multiple Tense Bullae in a Young Patient Who Has Linear Iga Dermatosis.
Multiple Vasospastic Macules (Bier Spots) on the Dorsal Aspect of the Hand of a Young Patient with Capillary Malformation-Arteriovenous Malformation Syndrome.
Multiple Verrucous Papules with Pinpoint Thrombosed Vessels Coalescing to Form Mosaic Plantar Warts. There is Mild Maceration Surrounding Some of the Lesions and Partial Clearance Due to Treatment with Salicylic Acid.
Circumscribed (Plaque) Morphea. There is a New Lesion Shown in the Center of the Photograph. It is an Erythematous Patch with a More Intensely Erythematous to Violaceous Border. Resolving Lesions are Seen as Hyperpigmented Patches.
Closed Comedones (Arrows) are Small White or Skin-Colored Papules Without Surrounding Erythema. This Patient Has Mild Acne.
Close-Up View of the Patient in Figure 49.1. Note that in Lichen Striatus, the Papules are Flat-Topped (Ie, Lichenoid).
Clustered Vesicles on an Erythematous Base in an Infant with Neonatal Herpes Simplex Virus Infection.
Collodion Baby. This Neonate Was Covered in a Parchment-Like Membrane at Birth. At 3 Days of Age, Note the Shedding of the Membrane with Peeling in Sheets on the Arm (A) and Abdomen (B).
Combined Infantile Hemangioma.
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