Dry, chapped, peeling lips without significant inflammation.
Also known as nummular eczema, this presents as intensely itchy, well-demarcated, coin-shaped, vesicular or scaly plaques.
A disseminated herpes simplex virus infection superimposed on pre-existing eczema, causing a widespread eruption of monomorphic, umbilicated vesicles and "punched-out" erosions.
Eczema localized to the hands, which can be vesicular (dyshidrotic), hyperkeratotic (dry and fissured), or a combination.
A specific subtype of atopic dermatitis in adolescents and adults with prominent involvement of the head, neck, and upper trunk.
Eczema that has become secondarily infected with bacteria (usually Staphylococcus), characterized by the development of honey-colored crusts.
A condition in children causing a dry, shiny, glazed, and sometimes fissured erythema on the weight-bearing surfaces of the feet, sparing the arch.
A localized, well-demarcated, thickened (lichenified) plaque of skin with exaggerated skin markings, caused by chronic rubbing and scratching.
A form of irritant cheilitis with a characteristic distribution of erythema and scaling around the mouth, caused by habitual lip licking.
An eczematous eruption of the nipple and areola, presenting with erythema, scaling, weeping, and fissuring.
Intensely itchy, firm, excoriated nodules that arise from chronic scratching, typically on the extensor surfaces of the limbs.
Common in children, these are ill-defined, hypopigmented, slightly scaly patches on the face and arms, representing a mild form of atopic dermatitis.