Evening Slide Symposium (ESS)
42nd Annual Meeting
October 20-23, 2005
Sheraton Seattle Hotel & Towers
Seattle, Washington
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2005 ESS Discussions
Case 1:
A 37-year-old East-Asian male with an ulcerated nodule on his glans
penis for 6 months.
Case 2:
A 74-year-old Caucasian man with a recurrent neoplasm replacing most
of his penis.
Case 3:
A woman with an erythematous plaque on her chest.
Case 4:
A 58-year-old woman presents with an ulcerated lesion of the thigh,
which has been present for three months. Her past medical history is
remarkable for hypertension, diabetes, tobacco use. On examination,
her thigh reveals a large firm plaque with an area of ulceration.
Case 5:
A 50-year-old gentleman who is status post liver transplantation
presents with a solitary non-healing crust on the abdomen.
Case 6:
A 76-year-old gentleman presents with a 4 year history of an
enlarging tumor of the left nares. "Rule out mixed tumor."
Case 7:
A 16-year-old woman presented with a 5 day history of fever,
pharyngitis, and acute abdominal pain. Exploratory laparotomy
revealed mesenteric lymphadenopathy. Scattered non-pruritic vesicles
and bullae were noted on the back and lower extremities. Biopsy from
right posterior leg.
Case 8:
An 11-year-old Hispanic girl presented with persistent scaly crusted
plaques on the trunk and extremities since the first year of life.
Previous diagnoses included "diaper dermatitis" and psoriasis.
Biopsy from left leg.
Case 9:
A 36-year-old man with ulcerative colitis presented with an 18 month
history of waxing and waning crusted papules, plaques and pustules
involving the scalp, upper trunk, and gingival and labial oral
ulcers. Two punch biopsy specimens from the lower lip were submitted
for routine and direct immunofluorescent studies, respectively.
Case 10:
A 19-year-old male had a lesion on the left leg present for 6
months, with a clinical impression of keratoacanthoma. The lesional
cells are S-100 positive.
Case 11:
A 53-year-old female had a history of a "pale tumor" of her right
second finger. The lesional cells are CD34 positive.
Case 12:
A two-year-old female had several papules and nodules on her left
hand.
Case 13:
A 44-year-old woman with recurrent subcutaneous masses of the left
cheek. "Rule out panniculitis."
Case 14:
A 52-year-old Asian man with non-palplaple reticular lesions of his
thighs. "Rule out vasculitis."
Case 15:
A 43-year-old man on interferon with hepatitis C and liver failure
has a "3 week history of vascular papular lesions only on forehead."