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METROPOLITAN DERMATOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF LOS ANGELES
Fred F. Feldman, M.D., President
Irving A. Lewe, M.D., Vice-President
Harold Price, M.D., Secretary
April 13, 1954
Lymphocytic Infiltration of the Skin? Presented by Dr. Fred F. Feldman and by Dr. Ben A Newman.
B. W., a white man, aged 27, has been observed since June 11, 1953, for a recurrent eruption on the sides of his neck and face that had its onset one month previously. Before consulting us, he was given four roentgen treatments which did not alter the eruption.
On his first visit he presented a striking, extensive eruption, covering the sides of the neck and extending on to the face. The eruption was most pronounced near the angles of the jaw and consisted of annular and horseshoe-shaped, erythematous nodules and pea-sized, firm papules. There was a clinical resemblance to granuloma annulare and annular sarcoid. About 80% involution occurred within a