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The first known name for this condition was "serpiginous ulcer", which dates to 1882.
This migration causes local intense itching and a red serpiginous lesion.
He is credited with the histopathological description of late serpiginous syphilis.
There is no link between ringworm and serpiginous choroidopathy.
Serpiginous choroidopathy is an eye condition.
The depapillated areas are usually well demarcated, and bordered by a slightly raised, white, yellow or grey, serpiginous (snaking) peripheral zone.
Circinate balantitis (also known as balanitis circinata) is a serpiginous annular dermatitis associated with reactive arthritis.
A rodent ulcer was eating its way upwards, coiling on in its serpiginous fashion until the end of it was flush with her collar.
Saemisch's ulcer": a serpiginous corneal ulcer; ulcus serpens corneae. "
Acral arteriolar ectasia is characterized by purple serpiginous ectatic arterioles on the back of the fingers, presenting in the fifth decade of life.
The larvae migrate in tortuous tunnels between the stratum basale and stratum corneum of the skin, causing serpiginous vesicular lesions.
In contrast, white dots appear later in the disease stages of birdshot choroidopathy, serpiginous choroiditis, and APMPPE.
Serpiginous choroiditis, also known as geographic or helicoid choroidopathy, is an uncommon chronic progressive inflammatory disease affecting adult men and women equally in the second to seventh decades of life.
In 1881 a Scottish professor of surgery, Kenneth MacLeod described lesions of dermal ulcer in Madras as "serpiginous ulcer".
This money has made it possible to protect the biodiversity in the largest vestige of a serpiginous Appalachian forestry ecosystem extending over more than 400 kilometres from Vermont to Mont Caribou.
Elastosis perforans serpiginosa is a unique perforating disorder characterized by transepidermal elimination of elastic fibers and distinctive clinical lesions, which are serpiginous in distribution and can be associated with specific diseases.
It is also known as donovanosis, granuloma genitoinguinale, granuloma inguinale tropicum, granuloma venereum, granuloma venereum genitoinguinale, lupoid form of groin ulceration, serpiginous ulceration of the groin, ulcerating granuloma of the pudendum, and ulcerating sclerosing granuloma.
Because the endoscopical findings in RP often include serpiginous ulcerations, fissures, and ileitis proximal to the pouch, the syndrome has often been attributed to underlying Crohn's disease, the diagnosis of which had presumably been 'missed' both clinically and pathologically up to and including the time of colectomy.