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There is strong evidence that a certain percentage of lichenoid lesions are caused by amalgam fillings.
The most common dermal reactions to tattoo pigments are granulomas and various lichenoid diseases.
Chronic graft-versus-host-disease may manifest as lichenoid reaction.
Lichenoid drug reaction.
A jet helicopter carried him through the thin air, high above a barren red plain dotted here and there by the clumps of lichenoid vegetation.
Lichenoid trikeratosis is a cutaneous condition that may be related to keratosis lichenoides chronica.
A lichenoid eruption is a skin disease characterized by damage and infiltration between the epidermis and dermis.
Lichenoid dermatitis represents a wide range of cutaneous disorders characterized by lichen planus-like skin lesions.
This lichenoid skin lesion is located over the upper portion of the back and may appear before the onset of MTC.
Restated, lichenoid drug reactions occur as type IV (delayed) allergic reactions to medications for high blood pressure, heart disease and arthritis.
These lichenoid reactions are referred to as lichenoid mucositis (of the mucosa) or dermatitis (of the skin).
However, lichenoid lesions may be single (in comparison to the usual bilateral appearance of OLP) with proximity to amalgam (metal alloys) dental restoration.
This type of lichenoid lesions have a higher risk of malignant transformation to oral squamous cell carcinoma in comparison to the classical oral lichen planus.
Photosensitive drug reaction (or drug-induced photosensitivity) secondary to medications may cause phototoxic, photoallergic, and lichenoid reactions, and photodistributed telangiectasias, as well as pseudoporphyria.
The atrophic and erosive forms must be differentiated from lichenoid drug reactions,SLE, pemphigoids and other immunobullous disease, candidiasis, erythema multiforme.
Affected children may also exhibit various abnormalities of the nails; excessive sweating (hyperhidrosis) associated with an unpleasant odor; and/or, in some cases, development of small, firm raised lesions (lichenoid plaques).
Lichen scrofulosorum (also known as "Tuberculosis cutis lichenoides") is a rare tuberculid that presents as a lichenoid eruption of minute papules in children and adolescents with tuberculosis.
Lichen aureus (also known as "lichen purpuricus") is a skin condition characterized by the sudden appearance of one or several golden or rust-colored, closely packed macules or lichenoid papules.
Lichenoid reaction of graft-versus-host disease presents with chronic graft-versus-host disease, characterized by a lichenoid eruption indistinguishable clinically and histologically from lichen planus.
Giant cell lichenoid dermatitis is a cutaneous condition usually drug-associated entity, characterized by a lichenoid dermatitis with a granulomatous infiltrate composed of histiocytes and multinucleated giant cells.
Linear porokeratosis is characterized clinically by basic skin lesions that are identical to those of classic porokeratosis Mibelli, including lichenoid papules, annular lesions, hyperkeratotic plaques with central atrophy, and the characteristic peripheral ridge.
The most common oral health problems associated with diabetes are tooth decay, periodontal (gum) disease, salivary gland dysfunction, fungal infections, lichen planus and lichenoid reactions (inflammatory skin disease), infection and delayed healing, and taste impairment.
A biopsy is useful in identifying histological features that help differentiate OLP from these conditions, except of the histologically identical lichenoid reaction lesion (including lichenoid reaction of graft-versus-host disease).
Contact stomatitis (also known as "Contact lichenoid reaction," "Lichenoid amalgam reaction," and "Oral mucosal cinnamon reaction") is characterized by cutaneous lesions that may be located where the offending agent contacts the mucosa for a prolonged time.
Drug-induced lichenoid reactions (also known as "Lichenoid drug eruption" and "Drug-induced lichen planus") are skin eruptions that occur after ingestion, contact, or inhalation of certain chemicals, with the most common inducers being gold salts, beta blockers, antimalarials, thiazide diuretics, furosemide, spironolactone, and penicillamine.