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  1. Erythema Nodosum, Image 1

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    Description: Erythema nodosum is a skin disorder characterized by painful red nodules appearing mostly on the shins.
    Keywords: painful red nodules, Skin disorder
  2. Erythema Nodosum, Image 2

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    Description: Erythema nodosum is a skin disorder characterized by painful red nodules appearing mostly on the shins.
    Keywords: painful red nodules, Skin disorder
  3. Toxic Epidermal Necrolysis, Image 1

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    Description: Toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN) begins with fever, cough, and other nonspecific symptoms, and is soon followed by purplish, bloody-looking lesions on the skin and mucous membranes. These early lesions, typically found on the head, neck, and upper chest, soon merge and blister. Sheets of epidermis then begin to detach from the skin layers below. In time, the entire surface of the skin may be involved, with detachment of 100% of the epidermis.
    Keywords: Skin lesion, blister, Stevens-Johnson Syndrome, mucous membrane lesion
  4. Toxic Epidermal Necrolysis, Image 3

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    Description: Toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN) begins with fever, cough, and other nonspecific symptoms, and is soon followed by purplish, bloody-looking lesions on the skin and mucous membranes. These early lesions, typically found on the head, neck, and upper chest, soon merge and blister. Sheets of epidermis then begin to detach from the skin layers below. In time, the entire surface of the skin may be involved, with detachment of 100% of the epidermis.
    Keywords: Skin lesion, Stevens-Johnson Syndrome, mucous membrane lesion, blister
  5. Toxic Epidermal Necrolysis, Image 2

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    Description: Toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN) begins with fever, cough, and other nonspecific symptoms, and is soon followed by purplish, bloody-looking lesions on the skin and mucous membranes. These early lesions, typically found on the head, neck, and upper chest, soon merge and blister. Sheets of epidermis then begin to detach from the skin layers below. In time, the entire surface of the skin may be involved, with detachment of 100% of the epidermis.
    Keywords: blister, mucous membrane lesion, Skin lesion, Stevens-Johnson Syndrome
  6. Lichen Planus

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    Description: Lichen planus is a skin condition of unknown origin that produces small, shiny, flat-topped, itchy pink or purple raised spots on the wrists,forearms or lower legs, especially in middle-aged patients.
    Keywords: flat topped papule, Lichen Planus, purple, Skin disease
  7. Juvenile Dermatomyositis, Image 1

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    Description: Dermatomyositis (DM) is a connective-tissue disease related to polymyositis (PM) that is characterized by inflammation of the muscles and the skin.
    Keywords: Polymyositis-Dermatomyositis, Dermatopolymyositis, Dermatomyositis, Childhood Type
  8. Miliaria Crystallina

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    Description: Common In Hospitalized Patients Secondary Fever, Sweating
    Keywords: prickly heat, Sweat glands, skin, eruption, Miliaria
  9. Pemphigus Vulgaris

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    Description: Pemphigus is any of a group of diseases characterized by successive crops of large bullae (“water blisters”). Although rare, they are serious and require prompt treatment. The cause is unknown; they seem to occur only in adults and can occur in acute or chronic form. Pemphigus vulga´ris the most common and severe form of pemphigus, usually occurring between the ages of 40 and 60, characterized by the chronic development of flaccid, easily ruptured bullae upon apparently normal skin and mucous membranes, beginning focally but progressing to become generalized, leaving large, weeping, denuded surfaces that become partially crusted over with little or no tendency to heal and that enlarge by confluence. In untreated cases, sepsis, cachexia, and electrolyte imbalance may occur and lead to death.
    Keywords: Bullae, blisters, Pemphigus, Skin Diseases, Vesiculobullous
  10. Linear Iga Bullous Dermatosis (2/2 Antibiotics)

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    Description: A blistering disease of the skin and mucous membranes characterized by the presence of IgA antibodies in the mucous membranes, serum,and skin. It typically arises after exposure to specific medications, such as amiodarone, captopril, phenytoin, or vancomycin.
    Keywords: Autoimmune diesease, blisters, Linear IgA Bullous Dermatosis, Skin Diseases, Vesiculobullous, skin