Welcome to Skin cancer Guide
Melanoma Skin Cancer Article
. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.
What you need to know about Melanoma Skin Cancer
from:The most dangerous form of skin cancer is melanoma skin cancer. Though it may lead to death, if recognized and treated early, it is possible to completely cure the disease. Melanoma skin cancer is not a common form of skin cancer but it can cause death.
In melanoma skin cancer, the tumor originates in the melanocytes, which are cells that are responsible for producing melanin, the pigment that colors skin, eyes and hair. Most of the melanomas are black or brown; while there may be some melanomas which are skin colored, red, blue, purple, pink or white. Melanoma skin cancer is divided into four categories where three of them occupy the top layers of the skin and are sometimes invasive in nature. It is the fourth type of cancer that is invasive from its inception and serious as it penetrates deep into the skin and may spread to other parts of the body.
70% of this cancer is the superficial spreading form that is most common in young people. It travels on the top layer of the skin for some time, before penetrating deep into the body. The first sign of the cancer is flat or raised discolored patch with irregular borders in a geometrical form. Its color varies and can occur in any previously benign mole. This skin cancer is found anywhere on the body, but is most likely to occur in women’s legs, men’s trunk or the upper back in both.
Lentigo maligna is similar to the superficial melanoma as it too remains close to the skin surface. It appears as a flat or slightly elevated mottled tan or dark brown discoloration. This cancer is predominant in the elderly and its causes are chronic sun exposure, damage of facial skin and skin on ears, arms and upper trunk. If this cancer becomes invasive, it is referred to as lentigo maligna melanoma.
Though acral lentiginous melanoma is a form of melanoma that also spreads superficially before deep penetration in the body, it is different from the other forms of melanoma as it appears as black or brown discoloration under the nails or soles of feet and palms. This form of melanoma skin cancer is common in African-Americans and Asians and least common in Caucasians.
When first diagnosed, nodular melanoma skin cancer is invasive. It is when it becomes a bump that is blue, brown, tan, red, white, gray or skin tone that its malignancy be recognized. This form of skin cancer is predominant on arms, legs and trunks of elderly people, and the scalp of men.
Melanoma Skin Cancer News
Melanoma doubles risk of new cancer: study - PhysOrg
Lifestyle could play a key role in such cancers, including spending too long in the sun but also smoking and being overweight, it said. Researchers at Queen's University in Belfast studied almost 21,000 people who had been treated for non-melanoma ...
Read more...10 minute with . . .Karen Ryan: turbine tanning - Cleveland Plain Dealer
Times being what they are, maybe you're not going to Florida this winter. You hate having that pasty winter-white look, but having read all the skin-care warnings, you'd never think of hitting a tanning bed. Karen Ryan has another answer, involving a ...
Read more...Serious swelling - Exercises may prevent lymphedema after breast ... - Missoulian
Lymphedema specialist Johanna Murphy, left, shows breast cancer survivor Anne Holman an exercise to treat her lymphedema at Georgetown University Hospital in Washington, D.C. Photo by Jose Luis Magana/Associated Press WASHINGTON - Hospitals in about ...
Read more...Community organizes fund-raiser for family - Troy Record
BRUNSWICK — Every year the LaCoss family, including three sisters and their mother, go to their aunt’s house in Hoosick Falls to ring in the New Year with sleigh riding, a family sleepover and a large breakfast. But, this year, the gathering will ...
Read more...Couple survives cancer together - Paragould Daily Press
A positive attitude is the secret to surviving cancer, breast cancer survivor Glenda Beasley said. After she got over “the shock†of knowing she had cancer, she said, she refused to stop working and carried on with life as much as ...
Read more...



