Australian Journal of General Practice
A nursing home resident aged 73 years was referred to the local dermatology department for management of a severe reaction to 5% 5-fluorouracil cream.
A woman aged 19 years sustained a minor puncture wound to her left inner thigh while travelling in remote outback Australia.
A man aged 60 years presented with an enlarging penile lesion that had been present for six years.
A man aged 60 years presented with an irregularly shaped erythematous scalp plaque with a 5 cm diameter.
An independent, underweight woman aged 83 years presented with a one-day history of worsening left lower quadrant pain, difficulty mobilising and vomiting without abdominal distension.
A woman aged 70 years presented with a longstanding pigmented lesion on her right ear.
A student aged 15 years was brought by his mother to a Malaysian suburban primary care clinic.
A man aged 43 years presented with a persistent, progressively enlarging facial lesion that had persisted for more than 20 years.
A man aged 79 years who was living in a residential aged care facility and had an indwelling urinary catheter was noted by the caregiver to have ‘purple urine’ for more than a week.
A woman aged 62 years had a telehealth appointment for the management of osteoporosis.
A man aged 29 years presented to a general practitioner with mild central chest pain and non-bloody diarrhoea.
A Caucasian female, aged 40 years, previously healthy, presented with an eight-week history of a pruritic erythematous skin lesion affecting the inframammary creases.
A man aged 23 years presented to a new general practitioner requesting treatment for gout.
A man aged 46 years presented to a multidisciplinary team (plastic surgery, radiation oncology, dermatology) with a year-long history of a lentigo maligna on the right ear lobe.
A female patient aged 75 years had undergone bilateral mastectomy and reconstruction with silicone implants following breast cancer seven years ago.