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Splinter hemorrhages arise from the longitudinally aligned capillaries of the nail bed and are usually the result of trauma (Fig. 38–4). However, they can be associated with systemic disease, e.g., bacterial endocarditis, particularly when they arise in multiple nails, or when they occur more proximally.
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Splinter hemorrhages are small areas of bleeding under your nails. They look like thin, red or reddish-brown lines of blood below your nails.
Jun 1, 2010 ˇ Systemic disease may be the cause if the splinter hemorrhages appear in several nails, are located in the proximal portion of the nail plate, or ...
Splinter hemorrhages on multiple nails without any obvious trauma are indicative of systemic causes: not only IE, but antiphospholipid syndrome, vasculitis, and ...
Mar 22, 2023 ˇ Splinter hemorrhages are small bleeds that can occur under the fingernails or toenails. They're often red or brown in appearance and run along ...
Splinter hemorrhages look like thin, red to reddish-brown lines of blood under the nails. They run in the direction of nail growth.
Jul 24, 2017 ˇ A splinter hemorrhage is when small blood spots appear under the nail. They are caused by damaged blood vessels.
Splinter haemorrhages are common signs of psoriatic nail disease and nail disease due to lichen planus [3]. They can also be associated with a tumour. Psoriasis.
Splinter hemorrhages are essentially small spots of blood caused due to bleeding under the nails. ˇ As it is similar to other autoimmune diseases, diagnosis can ...
Aug 29, 2022 ˇ Splinter hemorrhages represent rupture of longitudinally oriented nail plate capillaries leading to extravasation and the historical hallmark ...