- Differential Diagnosis
- Diseases
- Drugs
- More
-
- Try building your search one term at a time, and be as specific as you can! Search term example: "chronic cough".
- Do not enter multiple findings such as "anemia, chronic cough, weight loss, vomiting" all at the same time.
- After selecting your term from the search results a list of possible diagnoses will be generated. If the list is too long, you will be able to narrow it down by entering additional terms.
- Do not enter values such as "heart rhythm 110" or "sodium 125", instead use "tachycardia" or "hyponatremia".
Sign-in (or register) to check out the new features we've just launched!
Differential Diagnosis For Adenopathy/adenitis - fistula/drainage
- Surgical, Procedure Complication
Surgical disorders/complications- Infectious Disorders (Specific Agent)
Cat-scratch disease
Sporotrichosis
Nocardia infection
Gumma, tuberculous
Lymphogranuloma venereum
Madura foot/Mycetoma/Maduramycosis
Paracoccidiodomycosis (S.A. Blastomyco)
Scrofula/cervical nodes tuberculosis
Syphilis, tertiary/gumma
Tularemia
Plague, bubonic
Tularemia meningitis
Gumma, syphilitic
Tularemia pneumonia
Yaws- Anatomic, Foreign Body, Structural Disorders
Foreign body- Synonyms
- Adenitis, Cutaneous fistula, Cutaneous Fistulas, External fistula, External fistula (morphologic abnormality), External Fistulas, Fistula Cutaneous, Fistula External, Fistula of skin, Fistula of skin (disorder), Fistula Skin, Fistulas Cutaneous, Fistulas External, Fistulas Skin, inflammation lymph node, Inflammation of lymph node, lymph node inflammation, Lymphadenitides, Lymphadenitis, Lymphadenitis (disorder), Sinus, Sinus skin, SKIN FISTULA, Skin Fistulas, Skin sinus, Skin sinus (disorder)
- Definition
- Be the first to add a definition for Adenopathy/adenitis - fistula/drainage
- External Links Related to Adenopathy/adenitis - fistula/drainage
- Wikipedia
- Merck
- Images
- PubMed (National Library of Medicine)
- NGC (National Guideline Clearinghouse)
- Medscape (eMedicine)
- Harrison's Online (accessmedicine)
- NEJM (The New England Journal of Medicine)