Pseudopelade.. The infected spots are smooth, soft and slightly low and are small, round or oval

Pseudopelade:
This term is used to identify alopecia of scleroderma, which appears on the scalp without known cause or clinical manifestations.
The condition may occur in children, so it is generally considered as a clinical syndrome that may be the final result of any one of several different pathologies.
Flat lichen and lupus erythematosus may lead to a clinically similar lesion.
The infected spots are smooth, soft and slightly low, and at an early stage of development in any personal spots there is sometimes redness. The spots tend to be small, round or oval, but bald spots may form by collecting a number of lesions.
Hair in non-infected areas is usually in normal condition.
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