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Image Number #9005 (Lupus vulgaris)

Diagnosis: Lupus vulgaris

Description:

Lupus vulgaris is the commonest form of cutaneous tuberculosis with a myriad of clinical presentations. It occurs in patients previously sensitized to Mycobacterium tuberculosis with a moderate to high degree of immunity. Classically, it starts as a soft brownish red papule or nodule that gradually expands by involution in one area with expansion in another, gradually progressing over a period of many years to form a well-defined skin coloured to erythematous plaque with an “apple jelly nodule” appearance on diascopy. Other variants may include keratotic, hypertrophic, nodular, and psoriasiform.

Morphology: Plaque

Site: Buttocks

Sex: M

Age: 55

Type: Clinical

Submitted By: Shahbaz Janjua

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Differential Diagnosis

History:

This 55 year old man presented with several year history of an extremely slowly progressing, mildly pruritic large plaque on the left buttock. On examination, a large well defined erythematous plaque covered with adherent psoriasiform scale was present on the left gluteal region. Areas of atrophic scarring were noted interspersed with areas of activity.   

DermNetNZ   eMedicine   PubMed   Dermatology Online   Archives   JAAD for "Lupus vulgaris"

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