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Dyshidrotic eczema is a skin condition involving blisters on your feet or the palms of your hands. See pictures and find a comprehensive overview.
Dyshidrotic eczema is a skin condition that causes itchy blisters on the palms, fingers, feet, and toes. It can also lead to red, cracked skin and changes in nail appearance.
View pictures of dyshidrotic eczema in the gallery below. Dyshidrotic eczema (pompholyx) is an itchy, chronic, recurrent, often symmetric eruption on the palms of hands, fingers, and soles of the feet. It is characterised by small, deep-seated, 1–2 mm fluid-filled vesicles on these sites.
Dyshidrotic eczema is a chronic (long-term) skin condition that causes small blisters and dry, itchy skin. It usually develops on your fingers, hands and feet. Other names for dyshidrotic eczema include dyshidrosis, acute palmoplantar eczema, vesiculobullous dermatitis and pompholyx.
Dyshidrotic eczema is a skin condition causing itchy blisters, typically on hands and feet, linked to allergies, stress, or contact irritants. This condition may be why your hands and feet are ...
Dyshidrosis symptoms include painful, itchy and fluid-filled blisters on the sides of the fingers, the palms of the hands and the bottoms of the feet. The blisters are small — about the width of a standard pencil lead.
Dyshidrosis, also called dyshidrotic eczema, is a dermatologic condition characterized by lesions in the form of small, itchy blisters that typically appear on the hands and soles. In this article, we’ll only show pictures of dyshidrosis lesions on the hands and feet.