random 1 Flashcards

1
Q

non-healing

A

Langerhans Cell Histiocytosis

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2
Q
A

Seb Derm

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3
Q
A

lichen striatus

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4
Q
A

nummular eczema

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5
Q
A

“herald patch” of pityriasis rosea

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6
Q
A

cutaneous mastocytosis - Darier sign

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7
Q
A

pityriasis rosea

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8
Q
A

pityriasis versicolor alba

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9
Q
A

Seb Derm

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10
Q
A

nummular eczema

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11
Q
A

Langerhans Cell Histiocytosis (key is petechiae/hemorrhage)

seborrheic distribution

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12
Q
A

nummular eczema

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13
Q
A

Seb Derm

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14
Q
A

Langerhans Cell Histiocytosis

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15
Q
A

Juvenile Xanthogranuloma

Unless they occur in the eyes, juvenile xanthogranulomas are harmless growths and disappear eventually over 2 to 3 years, usually without scarring.

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16
Q
A

Juvenile Xanthogranuloma

Unless they occur in the eyes, juvenile xanthogranulomas are harmless growths and disappear eventually over 2 to 3 years, usually without scarring.

17
Q
A

lichen striatus

18
Q
19
Q
20
Q
21
Q
A

pityriasis versicolor

22
Q
A

nummular eczema

23
Q
24
Q
25
urticaria pigmentosa type (mastocytosis)
26
pityriasis rosea
27
"herald patch" of pityriasis rosea
28
pityriasis rosea
29
juvenile xanthogranuloma
30
Herald patch of pityriasis rosea
31
cutaneous mastocytosis avoid mast cell degranulators (alcohol, anticholinergics, NSAIDS, ASA, narcotics, polymyxin, and systemic anesthetics) Antihistamines (H1 and H2 antagonistsm), topical systemic steroids, topical calcineurin inhibitors, oral cromolyn, PUVA/UVA1, intramuscular epi, and imatinib (in some with systemic mastocytosis - those who have FIP1L1 - PDGFRgene rearrangement)
32
Seb Derm