How about this:
Match the disease with its symptoms:
a. Eye pain and redness, itchy eye, turned-in eyelashes caused by Chlamydial spp.
b. Necrotic tissue, including pus, foul odor, gas, and pain — most likely caused by Clostridium perfringens.
c. Generalized peeling of the skin, usually in infants, includes fever, chills, and weakness.
d. Red, watery, irritated eye, with purulent discharge, sticky eyelids; caused by H. influenzae and/or Strep pneumoniae.
e. Fiery red raised well-demarcated rash with uneven surface (orange peel).
f. Ulcerations on the skin with blackened centers called eschars.
g. Small papular lesions on erythematous base that often ooze and crust.
h. Red, hot swollen area of the skin that is tender to palpation; most likely caused by Staph aureus or Strep pyogenes.
i. Rapidly progressing cellulitis, where lesions spread along the fascia deep into the skin; includes fever, weakness, and pain.
j. Red eye with ocular discharge caused by Chlamydial infection or by N. gonorrhoeae or other bacteria.
k. Infected hair follicles.
1. folliculitis
2. impetigo
3. staphylococcal scalded skin syndrome (SSSS)
4. erysipelas
5. cellulitis
6. necrotizing fasciitis
7. gas gangrene
8. cutaneous anthrax
9. pink eye or conjunctivitis
10. trachoma
11. ophthalmia neonatorum