1. LIVINGSTON, P. C. and WALKER, H. M.-Brit. JI. Qbhthal., p. 67, February, 1940. Med., Vol. IV, p. 785, 1919.
2. Miliary lupoid.-(a) Small reddish-brown hemispherical papules and nodules, the size of a corn seed, soft, and with a smooth surface, which shows light desquamation and hyperkeratosis in some cases. These may become flattened, spread out, depressed in the centre, and ultimately cicatrized atrophic plaques. (b) The nodular variety is rarer, and the lesions are larger than those just described, some being 5 cm. in diameter during the stage of eruption. They effect first the cheeks and are also found on the nose, shoulders, extensor aspects of the upper extremities, and the knees. They are smooth, slightly elevated, and bluishred. The florid stage may last twenty years and the lesions become violaceous and have a telangiectatic surface. During involution the centres become flattened and depressed, the margins telangiectatic and pigmented, and the spots annular
3. The skin of the cheeks, nose and sometimes the lobes of the ears and the skin of the fingers over an associated osseous lesion is diffusely infiltrated, with a sharp border and a burnished surface;pernio, Lupus
4. Large superficial serpiginous red areas affect the front of the legs and thighs;sarcoidique, Erythrodermic
5. have described the case of a girl, aged 17 years, who suffered from Boeck's sarcoidosis and had bilateral papilloedema and subsequent optic atrophy. Necropsy revealed well defined follicular infiltration of the left optic nerve, left papilla and chiasma with endothelial cells which extended to the cerebral peduncle and left temporal lobe. There were no areas of caseation, no necrosis, and no giant cells. Meningeal symptoms and signs and right hemicrania were present in a patient whose case is reported by Coppez and Dujardin;Reis; Rothfeld,1931