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Nodular form:

Vesicular form:

Generalized erythroderma form:

Acral form:

Generalized bullous form:

Infant form:

Vegetative form:

Urticarial form:

This rare form, termed pemphigoid nodularis, has clinical features that resemble prurigo nodularis, with blisters arising on normal-appearing or nodular lesional skin

In childhood-onset bullous pemphigoid associated with vaccination, the bullous lesions predominantly affect the palms, soles, and face

In infants affected by bullous pemphigoid, the blisters tend to occur frequently on the palms, soles, and face, affecting the genital areas rarely; 60% of these infant patients have generalized blisters

Less common than the generalized bullous type; manifests as groups of small, tense blisters, often on an urticarial or erythematous base

Some patients with bullous pemphigoid initially present with persistent urticarial lesions that subsequently convert to bullous eruptions; in some patients, urticarial lesions are the sole manifestations of the disease

This rare presentation can resemble psoriasis, generalized atopic dermatitis, or other skin conditions characterized by an exfoliative erythroderma

The most common presentation; tense bullae arise on any part of the skin surface, with a predilection for the flexural areas of the skin

Very uncommon, with vegetating plaques in intertriginous areas of the skin, such as the axillae, neck, groin, and inframammary areas