Isomorphic stimulus effect

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The isomorphic stimulus effect (also known as the Koebner phenomenon , according to the dermatologist Heinrich Koebner ) describes changes in the skin ( efflorescences ) that occur in certain skin diseases minutes to possibly weeks after unspecific (mechanical, chemical or thermal) irritation in previously unchanged sections and those of the existing skin disease are equal (isomorphic).

The Köbner phenomenon is described, among other things, in:

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