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    • Mashup Score: 1
      Episode 88 | Notes of Hope: Fighting AS One Song at a Time with Jess Robbins - Spondylitis Association of America - Ankylosing Spondylitis - 7 month(s) ago

      Musician Jess Robbins shares her journey with spondylitis and how she channeled her pain, uncertainty, and resilience into her new album.

      Source: spondylitis.org
      Categories: General Medicine News, Rheumatology
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      • Profile photo of 	spondylitis
        spondylitis

        Tune in to our new Spondycast episode, Notes of Hope: Fighting AS One Song at a Time with Jess Robbins. Musician Jess Robbins shares her journey with spondylitis and how she channeled her pain, uncertainty, and resilience into her new album. https://t.co/KHL3V5yL4w #diagnosis… https://t.co/IefduRqDUD https://t.co/weACOx99CT

    • Mashup Score: 20
      Nodules and ulcerations on back, scalp, axillae, and buttocks - 11 month(s) ago

      A 62-year-old African American male with SLE presented with a six-year history of worsening recurrent bumps and open sores on the scalp, back, and axillae. He reported multiple emergency department and urgent care visits as well as several treatments with no improvement. Physical examination of the scalp, face, trunk, axillae, and buttocks revealed numerous papules and nodules, some of which were ulcerated (Figs 1 and 2). Biopsies of the scalp and back revealed nodular and diffuse dermal infiltrate with a mixed population of cells with large reniform nuclei, lymphocytes, plasma cells, and eosinophils in fibrosing granulation tissue (Fig 3).

      Source: www.jaadcasereports.org
      Categories: General Medicine News, Dermatology
      Tweet Tweets with this article
      • Profile photo of 	AADmember
        AADmember

        What's the #diagnosis? A 62-year-old African American male with SLE presented with a six-year history of worsening recurrent bumps and open sores on the scalp, back, and axillae. He reported multiple ER/urgent care visits and...https://t.co/rSZmJEdOxI @JAADjournals https://t.co/G6paUM1k7O

    • Mashup Score: 15
      Painful plaques in a woman with recurrent squamous cell carcinoma - 11 month(s) ago

      A 79-year-old woman with an elevated body mass index presented with a painful, pruritic, tender plaque on her inferior abdomen, extending to her superior mons pubis and progressing to her right lateral thigh, intermittently recurring with rigors and night sweats for over 6 years (Fig 1). She had a history of vulvar squamous cell carcinoma and vulvar lichen sclerosus since 2013 and was awaiting re-excision for her third squamous cell carcinoma recurrence. None of her medications had been dose-adjusted or introduced within this time frame.

      Source: www.jaadcasereports.org
      Categories: General Medicine News, Dermatology
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      • Profile photo of 	AADmember
        AADmember

        What's the #diagnosis? 79-year-old woman with elevated body mass index presented with a painful, pruritic, tender plaque on her inferior abdomen, extending to her superior mons pubis and progressing to her right lateral thigh, intermittently recurring... https://t.co/zLSKiAZtIE https://t.co/RzUlawuF6g

    • Mashup Score: 16
      Painful plaques in a woman with recurrent squamous cell carcinoma - 1 year(s) ago

      A 79-year-old woman with an elevated body mass index presented with a painful, pruritic, tender plaque on her inferior abdomen, extending to her superior mons pubis and progressing to her right lateral thigh, intermittently recurring with rigors and night sweats for over 6 years (Fig 1). She had a history of vulvar squamous cell carcinoma and vulvar lichen sclerosus since 2013 and was awaiting re-excision for her third squamous cell carcinoma recurrence. None of her medications had been dose-adjusted or introduced within this time frame.

      Source: www.jaadcasereports.org
      Categories: General Medicine News, Dermatology
      Tweet Tweets with this article
      • Profile photo of 	AADmember
        AADmember

        What's the #diagnosis? 79-year-old woman with elevated body mass index presented with a painful, pruritic, tender plaque on her inferior abdomen, extending to her superior mons pubis and progressing to her right lateral thigh, intermittently recurring... https://t.co/zLSKiAZtIE https://t.co/RzUlawuF6g

    • Mashup Score: 28
      Verrucous plaque on the face - 1 year(s) ago

      A healthy, Hispanic, 23-year-old woman living in Illinois, presented with 10-month history of a verrucous plaque on the left lower face. She had been treated for a pneumonia just prior to the plaque developing. The patient stated the lesion had started as a “pimple” and has continued to enlarge. Treatment with over-the-counter triple antibiotic ointment and hydrocortisone cream yielded no improvement. Over the next 10 months, the lesion continued to grow and she ultimately sought medical care. Physical exam revealed a 12-cm plaque on the L lower cheek and neck with central crusting, erosions, and a verrucous, hyperkeratotic border; no other lesions or salient physical findings were otherwise present.

      Source: www.jaadcasereports.org
      Categories: General Medicine News, Dermatology
      Tweet Tweets with this article
      • Profile photo of 	AADmember
        AADmember

        What is the #diagnosis? A healthy 23-year-old Hispanic woman from Illinois presented with a 10-month history of a verrucous plaque on the left lower face. She had been treated for a pneumonia just prior to the plaque developing. @jaadjournals https://t.co/FfOG20HmjK https://t.co/qICXAvL0xZ

    • Mashup Score: 18
      Verrucous plaque on the face - 1 year(s) ago

      A healthy, Hispanic, 23-year-old woman living in Illinois, presented with 10-month history of a verrucous plaque on the left lower face. She had been treated for a pneumonia just prior to the plaque developing. The patient stated the lesion had started as a “pimple” and has continued to enlarge. Treatment with over-the-counter triple antibiotic ointment and hydrocortisone cream yielded no improvement. Over the next 10 months, the lesion continued to grow and she ultimately sought medical care. Physical exam revealed a 12-cm plaque on the L lower cheek and neck with central crusting, erosions, and a verrucous, hyperkeratotic border; no other lesions or salient physical findings were otherwise present.

      Source: www.jaadcasereports.org
      Categories: General Medicine News, Dermatology
      Tweet Tweets with this article
      • Profile photo of 	AADmember
        AADmember

        What is the #diagnosis? A healthy 23-year-old Hispanic woman from Illinois presented with a 10-month history of a verrucous plaque on the left lower face. She had been treated for a pneumonia just prior to the plaque developing. @jaadjournals https://t.co/FfOG20HmjK https://t.co/qICXAvL0xZ

    • Mashup Score: 19
      Nodules and ulcerations on back, scalp, axillae, and buttocks - 1 year(s) ago

      A 62-year-old African American male with SLE presented with a six-year history of worsening recurrent bumps and open sores on the scalp, back, and axillae. He reported multiple emergency department and urgent care visits as well as several treatments with no improvement. Physical examination of the scalp, face, trunk, axillae, and buttocks revealed numerous papules and nodules, some of which were ulcerated (Figs 1 and 2). Biopsies of the scalp and back revealed nodular and diffuse dermal infiltrate with a mixed population of cells with large reniform nuclei, lymphocytes, plasma cells, and eosinophils in fibrosing granulation tissue (Fig 3).

      Source: www.jaadcasereports.org
      Categories: General Medicine News, Dermatology
      Tweet Tweets with this article
      • Profile photo of 	AADmember
        AADmember

        What's the #diagnosis? A 62-year-old African American male with SLE presented with a six-year history of worsening recurrent bumps and open sores on the scalp, back, and axillae. He reported multiple ER/urgent care visits and...https://t.co/rSZmJEdOxI @JAADjournals https://t.co/G6paUM1k7O

    • Mashup Score: 16
      Painful plaques in a woman with recurrent squamous cell carcinoma - 2 year(s) ago

      A 79-year-old woman with an elevated body mass index presented with a painful, pruritic, tender plaque on her inferior abdomen, extending to her superior mons pubis and progressing to her right lateral thigh, intermittently recurring with rigors and night sweats for over 6 years (Fig 1). She had a history of vulvar squamous cell carcinoma and vulvar lichen sclerosus since 2013 and was awaiting re-excision for her third squamous cell carcinoma recurrence. None of her medications had been dose-adjusted or introduced within this time frame.

      Source: www.jaadcasereports.org
      Categories: General Medicine News, Dermatology
      Tweet Tweets with this article
      • Profile photo of 	AADmember
        AADmember

        What's the #diagnosis? 79-year-old woman with elevated body mass index presented with a painful, pruritic, tender plaque on her inferior abdomen, extending to her superior mons pubis and progressing to her right lateral thigh, intermittently recurring... https://t.co/zLSKiAZtIE https://t.co/RzUlawuF6g

    • Mashup Score: 4
      AAD.org Login - 2 year(s) ago

      Create a non-member account if you are applying for membership or need to interact with AAD systems. Non-member accounts do not have access to the member-only sections of our

      Source: identity.aad.org
      Categories: General Medicine News, Dermatology
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      • Profile photo of 	AADmember
        AADmember

        What is the most appropriate next step in establishing the #diagnosis? A 7-year-old girl is brought to the emergency department for evaluation of a new-onset rash. Her medical history is significant for myasthenia gravis, diagnosed 2 months earlier... https://t.co/ZhXm3y6DNP https://t.co/6hjH1P1YuD

    • Mashup Score: 20
      Reddish plaque and nodules on a child's cheek - 2 year(s) ago

      A 14-year-old child, operated on; at the age of 5; for dacryocystitis secondary to a trauma of the right eye. He has since presented a recurrent periorbital erythema treated several times as eczema by topic corticosteroids without improvement. The evolution was marked, 9 years later, by the extension of the erythematous plaque to the cheek and nose, appearance of lupoid nodules and keratinization of the appendages of the eye with ectropion (Fig 1). Dermoscopy showed yellow-orange globules, white scales, branching and dot vessels, and white structureless areas (Fig 2).

      Source: www.jaadcasereports.org
      Categories: General Medicine News, Partners & KOLs
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      • Profile photo of 	JAADjournals
        JAADjournals

        What's the #diagnosis? A 14-year-old was operated on at the age of 5 for dacryocystitis secondary to a trauma of the right eye. He has since presented a recurrent periorbital erythema that was treated several times as eczema by topical corticosteroids... https://t.co/4qQvBw3Xk1 https://t.co/qnm6moz8ml

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