A 57-year-old male presents for evaluation of a largely asymptomatic eruption on his bilateral anterior lower legs, which has been present and unchanged for months. He has tried treating it with a variety of over-the-counter medications without relief or improvement. He is otherwise well and denies any systemic complaints. The lesions are asymptomatic. The patient denies new medications or exposures.

On examination, the patient has numerous discrete pink macules with a faint rim of scale as depicted.The lesions are limited to the lower legs and are distributed roughly symmetrically bilaterally. There are no lesions on the thighs or anywhere above that. What could be the possible diagnosis? *This image based case is from Docplexus editorial team for educative purpose only. Source: Derma updates