Diseases
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Skin examination
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Diagnosis
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Additional findings
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Type
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Color
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Texture
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Size
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Distribution
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Dermoscopic Findings
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Histopathology
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Cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma[1]
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SCC in situ (Bowen's disease)
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- Fair-skinned individuals: sun-exposed areas
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- Presence of dotted and/or glomerular vessels
- White to yellowish surface scales
- Red-yellowish background
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- Slow growth over the years
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Invasive squamous cell carcinoma
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- Fair-skinned individuals: sun-exposed areas
- In black individuals: legs, anus, and areas of chronic inflammation
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- White circles
- White structureless areas
- Masses of keratin
- Hairpin and linear-irregular vessels
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Keratoacanthoma[2]
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- Macule
- Papule
- May have telangiectasias
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- Skin-colored
- Mildly erythematous
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- Prominent keratinous core in the center of the nodule
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- Sun-exposed areas
- Face, neck, hands, and arms
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- White circles
- Keratin
- Blood spots
- White structureless zones
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- Dermal inflammatory infiltrate
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- Rapid growth (within weeks)
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Merkel cell carcinoma[3]
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- Shiny
- Flesh-colored or bluish-red
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- Milky red areas
- Linear
- Irregular vessels
- Polymorphous vessels
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- Older individuals with light skin tones
- Rapidly growing
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Basal cell carcinoma[4]
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Nodular basal cell carcinoma
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- Focused, bright red, and branching arborizing vessels
- Loosely arranged blue-gray dots
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- Nest-like infiltration with basaloid cells
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- May have a "rolled" border
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Superficial basal cell carcinoma
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- Sun-exposed areas
- Head (cheek and nose)
- Trunk
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- Superficial fine telangiectasia
- Shiny white to red, translucent or opaque structureless areas
- Multiple small erosions
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- Large, hyperchromatic, oval nuclei
- Minimal cytoplasm
- Small basaloid nodules
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Sclerosing basal cell carcinoma (morpheaform)[5]
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Prurigo nodules[6][7]
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- Few millimeters to several centimeters
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- Extensor surfaces of the arms and legs and on the trunk
- Upper back, abdomen, and sacrum
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- White "starburst pattern" surrounding red/brown/yellow crusts
- Erosions
- Hyperkeratosis
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- Thick and compact orthohyperkeratosis
- Irregular epidermal hyperplasia
- Focal parakeratosis with irregular acanthosis
- Nonspecific dermal infiltrate containing WBCs
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- Nodules range in number from few to hundreds
- Worsened by heat, sweating, or irritation from clothing
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Melanoma[8]
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Melanoma in situ (Lentigo Maligna)[9]
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- Variable (from light to dark brown, black, pink, red, or white)
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- Sun-damaged skin of the head or neck
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- Asymmetric, pigmented follicular openings
- Gray angulated lines
- Gray areas, dots, and globules
- Circle within a circle
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- Darkening of pigmentation, sharpening of borders, or emergence of nodular areas are signs of progression to lentigo maligna melanoma
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Lentigo maligna melanoma[10]
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- Chronically sun-damaged areas
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- Asymmetric, pigmented follicular openings
- Gray angulated lines
- Gray areas, dots, and globules
- Circle within a circle
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- Usually in older individuals
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Superficial spreading melanoma[11]
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- Macule
- Plaque with irregular borders
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- Variably pigmented (red, blue, black, gray, and white)
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- Anywhere but usually:
- Back (men and women)
- Lower extremities (women)
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- Asymmetry of shape
- > 2 colors
- Asymmetry of structures
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- Asymmetric
- Poorly circumscribed
- Lack cellular maturation
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- Lateral (radial) growth before vertical (invasive) growth
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Nodular melanoma[12][13]
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- Pigment network or pseudonetwork
- Aggregated brown or black globules
- Blue pigmentation within lesion
- Small dotted or comma vessels
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- Dermal growth in isolation or in association with an epidermal component
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- Two-thirds arise in normal skin, the rest in existing moles
- Rapidly enlarging
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Acral lentiginous melanoma[14]
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- Palmar
- Plantar
- Subungual
- Mucosal surfaces
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- Parallel-ridge pattern
- Irregular diffuse pigmentation
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- Asymmetric proliferation of single melanocytes at dermoepidermal junction
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- Most common among dark skinned individuals
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Amelanotic melanoma[15]
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- Slightly elevated borders
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- Dotted vessels
- Linear irregular vessels
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Common nevus[16][17]
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- Smooth surface
- Terminal hairs often present
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- Sun-exposed areas above the waist
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- Comma-shaped or curved vessels
- Structureless light brown background
- Residual brown thick circles around the hair follicles
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- Also called Miescher nevus
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Blue nevus[18]
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- Head and neck,
- Dorsal aspect of the distal extremities
- Sacral area
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- Structureless blue pigmentation
- Structureless blue and white or blue and brown on some occasions
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- Proliferation of dendritic, dermal, melanin-producing melanocytes
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- Also called Mongolian spots
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Spitz nevus[19][20]
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Nonpigmented Spitz nevus
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- Coiled vessels
- White network over a pink to reddish background
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- In children and adolescents
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Reed-like Spitz[21]
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- Head and neck
- Upper and lower extremities
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- Enlarged spindle melanocytes with polyangular form
- "Ground glass" cytoplasm
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- Most commonly develops in children, adolescents, and young adults.
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Solar lentigo[22]
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- Faint pigmented fingerprint structures
- Structureless pattern
- Light brown pseudonetwork with well-defined borders and a "moth-eaten" edge
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- Associated with UV exposure and skin aging
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Sebaceous hyperplasia[23]
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- Structureless yellow to whitish center surrounded by short linear "crown vessels"
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- Usually in middle-aged or older patients
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Lichen planus-like keratosis[24]
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- Appearance depends on stage of evolution
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