Presents with an eczematous, red, and possibly weeping rash with distinct borders corresponding to the area of contact with an irritant or allergen.
A general term for inflammation, often appearing as poorly defined erythema and scale, with secondary changes like excoriations and lichenification from chronic scratching.
Characterized by pruritus accompanied by distinctive white, atrophic, "cigarette-paper" thin skin and possible fissures or erosions.
Causes intense nocturnal pruritus, particularly in children, but often lacks any primary visible skin changes on inspection.
Presents as well-demarcated, red, non-scaly (due to moisture) plaques in the intergluteal cleft, a form known as inverse psoriasis.