From the Journal

Dermclinic
Dermclinic
12/01/2017
David L. Kaplan, MD
This 83-year-old woman presented with a 1-week history of an asymptomatic rash that wrapped around the right side of her trunk.
12/01/2017
Dermclinic
Dermclinic
11/30/2017
David L. Kaplan, MD
This 43-year-old man presented for evaluation of asymptomatic papules on the lateral aspects of both eyelids of 1 week’s duration.
11/30/2017
Case In Point
Case In Point
11/08/2017
Anadita Arora, MD; Mohamed Ali Mohamed, MD; Andrew D. Thompson, MD, PhD
DRESS syndrome has been known for many decades as a severe adverse reaction to a medication.
11/08/2017
Photoclinic
Photoclinic
11/01/2017
Bhagwan Das Bang, MD
A 2-year-old girl presented with a pruritic rash. Her mother said the rash had begun after the girl had helped her father in a wheat field.
11/01/2017
What's Your Diagnosis?
What's Your Diagnosis?
10/22/2017
Benjamin Barankin, MD, FRCPC; Alexander K.C. Leung, MD, MBBS, FRCPC, FRCP
Dermatofibrosarcoma protuberans is the most common dermal sarcoma, accounting for approximately 18% of cutaneous soft-tissue sarcomas.
10/22/2017
Photoclinic
Photoclinic
10/02/2017
Benjamin Barankin, MD, FRCPC; Alexander K.C. Leung, MD, MBBS, FRCPC, FRCP
A 62-year-old man presented with a raised asymptomatic growth on his upper back.
10/02/2017
Dermclinic
Dermclinic
09/19/2017
A 68-year-old woman with a history of brittle diabetes mellitus and end-stage renal disease (ESRD) that had required hemodialysis for several years presented to the emergency department with severely...
09/19/2017
Dermatology
Dermatology
09/15/2017
A 28-year-old white woman presented with recurrent boils in the axillary and inguinal areas. The lesions had been fluctuating in severity for the preceding 5 or 6 years and often had flared premenstrually....
09/15/2017
Photoclinic
Photoclinic
09/01/2017
Brittany Reid, MS; Emily Rubenstein, DO
CARP predominantly affects young adults and typically involves the upper back, chest, neck, axillae, face, and flexural areas.
09/01/2017
Photoclinic
Photoclinic
09/01/2017
Joe R. Monroe, PA-C, MPAS, PA
First described in 1846 by Eichstedt, tinea versicolor is caused by saprophytic, lipid-dependent yeasts in the genus Malassezia that are part of normal skin flora.
09/01/2017