1. The social representation about the body, the skin and the skin diseases from the Indigenous thinking.- 2. A brief history of the Indigenous people of South American.- 3. A brief history of the Xingu National Park, Central Brazil.- 4. Elementary skin lesions in the dermatological medical examination.- 5. Infectious diseases.- 5.1. Fungal diseases
5.1.1. Dermatophytosis and Granuloma trichophyticum
5.1.2. Paronychia
5.1.3. Pityriasis versicolor
5.1.4. Tinea imbricate
5.1.5. Black piedra
5.1.6. Lobomycosis
5.1.7. Chromoblastomycosis
5.1.8. Mycetoma
5.2. Bacterial diseases
5.2.1. Impetigo
5.2.2. Bacterial folliculitis
5.2.3. Erisypela and Cellulitis
5.2.4. Furunculosis and Abscess
5.2.5. Cutaneous Mycobacteriosis
5.3. Virus diseases
5.3.1. Warts
5.3.2. Focal epithelial hyperplasia
5.3.3. Condyloma acuminatum
5.3.4. Moluscum contagiosum
5.3.5. Herpes simplex
5.3.6. Herpes zoster
5.4. Parasitic diseases
5.4.1. Scabiosis
5.4.2. Pediculosis
5.4.3. Larva migrans cutaneous
5.4.4. Tungiaisis
5.4.5. Leishmaniasis.- 6. Inflammatory diseases.- 6.1. Pityriasis alba
6.2. Eczematids
6.3. Miliaria
6.4. Contact dermatitis
6.5. Seborrheic dermatitis
6.6. Neurodermatitis
6.7. Psoriasis
6.8. Prurigo
6.9. Urticaria
6.10. Fixed drug eruption.- 7. Neoplastic diseases
7.1. Seborrheic keratosis
7.2. Melanocytic naevi
7.3. Mucous cysts
7.4. Pigmented basocellular carcinoma
7.5. Spinocellular carcinoma.- 8. Genetic diseases.- 8.1. Epidermolysis bullosa
8.2. Peutz-Jeghers syndrome.- 9. Miscellaneous diseases.- 9.1. Hypertrophic scars and Keloids
9.2. Lichen striatus
9.3. Endemic pemphigus foliaceus (“wild fire”)
9.4. Geographic tongue
9.5. Fox-Fordyce disease
9.6. Hydroa vacciniforme.