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Showing posts with label pictures of skin moles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pictures of skin moles. Show all posts

Friday, July 18, 2008

What is skin cancer logoWhat are Atypical Nevi

Onset: begin to appear during early childhood. The characteristic features of atypical moles are present at the time of puberty. Unlike common acquired melanocytic nevi, which stop appearing after age 30, atypical nevi continue to appear well into adulthood.
Size: ranging from 6 mm-15 mm in diameter.
Border: irregularly outlined, indistinct, and fades imperceptibly into the surrounding skin.
Color: variegated with a haphazard mixture of pink, tan, brown, and black.
Surface: irregular, often with a central or eccentric papule surrounded by a prominent macular component.
Site: anywhere in the skin but occur most commonly on the trunk and upper extremities. Affected persons often have nevi in sun-protected areas, such as the scalp, groin, buttocks, the breasts in women, and the palms and soles.
Progression: increased risk of melanoma, most often the superficial spreading type.
















Friday, July 11, 2008

What is skin cancer logoWhat is Becker’s Nevus

Becker’s Nevus
Origin: a developmental anomaly, lacks nevus cells
Onset: lesions appear in adolescent men
Site: on the shoulder, submammary area, and upper and lower back
Appearance: either a brown macule, a patch of hair, or both; nonhairy lesions may later develop hair. The border is irregular and sharply demarcated.
Size: varies in size and may enlarge to cover the entire upper arm or shoulder
Treatment: usually too large to remove by excision. The hair may be shaved
Progression: Malignancy has never been reported
Associated lesions: other developmental defects such as ipsilateral hypoplasia of breast and skeletal anomalies including scoliosis, spina bifida occulta, or ipsilateral hypoplasia of a limb in Becker nevus syndrome.















Thursday, July 10, 2008

What is skin cancer logoWhat are Halo Nevi

Onset: occur primarily during adolescence. The average age of onset is 15 years.
Course: The halo usually re-pigments over a few years. Focal atypical nevus cells may be seen though the majority of the pre-existing nevi are benign.
Prevalence: 1% of the population
Site: located on the trunk; they never occur on palms and soles.
Appearance: The depigmented halo is symmetric and round or oval with a sharply demarcated border.
Development: Primary: may occur as an isolated phenomenon or Secondary: several nevi may spontaneously develop halos. A pre-existing nevus develops a surrounding rim of hypopigmentation that heralds the gradual disappearance of the nevus over several months.
Significance: Halo nevi appear to be a host response directed against the nevus cells.
Associated Lesions: Halo nevi also occur in people with vitiligo. A halo may rarely develop around malignant melanoma, but in such instances it is usually not symmetric.
Implications: People with halo nevi should have a full skin examination to look for vitiligo and also to screen for melanoma.
Diagnosis: Woods light accentuates the halo. Skin biopsy shows a junction or compound nevus surrounded by a dense infiltrate of lymphocytes. There are no melanocytes in the halo area.
Treatment: Removal of a halo nevus is unnecessary. If the nevus itself has atypical features, a conservative excision in which the mole part of a halo nevus may be removed by shave or excision.















A halo around a malignant melanoma


Wednesday, July 9, 2008

What is skin cancer logoWhat is a Spitz Nevus

Site: most often occurs on the face, scalp or legs of pre-adolescent children.

Onset: most common in children, but does appear in adults.

Course: They appear suddenly and, contrary to slowly evolving common moles. The lesion and its biologic course are benign.

Appearance: hairless, dome-shaped papules or nodules, usually solitary but may be multiple.

Surface: a smooth or warty surface

Size: vary in size from 0.3 to 1.5 cm.

Color: red to reddish-pink caused by increased vascularity
Complications: bleeding sometimes follows trauma.
Diagnosis: Skin biopsy reveals overall architectural order with nested spindle-shaped nevus cells (A cell of a pigmented skin mole whose absence of dendrites differentiates from a melanocyte) and areas with large pleomorphic nevus cells. Such changes would be worrisome for melanoma in an adult. Histologic differentiation from melanoma is sometimes difficult.

Treatment: should be removed for microscopic examination, complete excision to minimize the risk of recurrence and associated pleomorphism.




Tuesday, July 8, 2008

What is skin cancer logoWhat is the Blue Nevus

The Blue Nevus
Onset: appears in childhood.
Site: most common on the extremities, head and neck, buttock and dorsum of the hands.
Size: usually less than 0.5 cm.
Appearance: a solitary, slightly elevated, round, regular nevus. A rare variant, the cellular blue nevus, is larger (usually greater than 1 cm) and nodular and is frequently located on the buttock.
Color: Blueish coloration is attributed to intensely pigmented melanocytes located in the mid to lower dermis. The brown pigment absorbs the longer wavelengths of light and scatters blue light. This is called the Tyndall effect.
Progression: Melanomas are reported arising in association with a common or cellular blue nevus and arising de novo and resembling cellular blue nevi.
Treatment: may be removed for cosmetic purposes.



Intensely pigmented melanocytes located in the mid to lower dermis




The cellular blue nevus




Progression to Melanoma

Sunday, July 6, 2008

What is skin cancer logoWhat is Nevus Spilus

Onset: They may appear at any age but usually develop before adulthood and follow a benign persistent course. Lesions can appear at birth or in early infancy as light colored café au lait macules. Pigmented macules and papules then develop over a period of months to years.
Cause: The anatomic position or time of onset is not related to sun exposure.
Origin: It has been suggested that nevus spilus is a subtype of congenital melanocytic nevus.
Size: Lesions may be very large. There is considerable variation in size, ranging from 1 to 20 cm.
Shape: Oval or irregularly shaped
Appearance: It is a common hairless, brown lesion that is dotted with darker brown-to-black spots. The brown area is usually flat, and the black dots may be slightly elevated and contain typical nevus cells.
Special features: The background hyperpigmentation histologically has the features of a lentigo or café au lait macule. The spots may be lentigines, junctional, compound, or intraepidermal nevi.
Treatment: Routine excision is not necessary. Biopsy suspicious areas. nevus spilus is flat and necessitates excision and closure if the patient desires removal.