- 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!
Possible Causes For Ulceroglandular syndrome - Causes
- Infectious Disorders (Specific Agent)
Cat-scratch disease
Erythrasma
Syphilis
Anthrax
Glanders (malleomyces mallei)
Chancroid
Cutaneous atypical mycobacterial inf.
Leishmaniasis, mucocutaneous
Leishmaniasis, old world cutaneous
Lupus vulgaris/Tuberculous
Lymphogranuloma venereum
Mycobacterium marinum/granuloma skin
Mycobacterium/fortuitum/ulcerans/others
Tularemia
Tularemia meningitis
Buruli ulcer
Tularemia pneumonia
Yaws- Infected organ, Abscesses
Necrotizing fasciitis/mixed
Ecthyma/Ulcerating impetigo
Pyogenic granuloma
Tropical/phagadenic/gangrenous ulcer- Granulomatous, Inflammatory Disorders
Pyoderma gangrenosa
Sarcoidosis, cutaneous- Neoplastic Disorders
Basal cell carcinoma
Carcinoma, squamous, skin- Allergic, Collagen, Auto-Immune Disorders
Behcet's Disease- Relational, Mental, Psychiatric Disorders
Factitious cutaneous ulcer- Anatomic, Foreign Body, Structural Disorders
Foreign body reaction/effect
Cutaneous ulcer
Decubitus ulcer- Reference to Organ System
Trophic foot ulcer- Synonyms
- Ulcero glandular sarcoid syndrome
- Definition
- Be the first to add a definition for Ulceroglandular syndrome - Causes
- External Links Related to Ulceroglandular syndrome - Causes
- 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)