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Diseases Skin examination Diagnosis Additional findings
Type Color Texture Size Distribution Dermoscopic Findings Histopathology
Cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma SCC in situ (Bowen's disease)
  • Patch
  • Plaque
  • Erythematous
  • Skin colored
  • Scaly
  • Variable
  • Fair-skinned individuals: sun-exposed areas
  • In black individuals: legs, anus, and areas of chronic inflammation
  • Presence of dotted and/or glomerular vessels
  • White to yellowish surface scales
  • Red-yellowish background
  • Keratinocytic dysplasia of the epidermis
  • No infiltration into dermis
  • Pleomorphic keratinocytes
  • Hyperchromatic nuclei
  • Slow growth over the years
Invasive squamous cell carcinoma
  • Papule
  • Plaque
  • Nodule
  • Skin colored
  • Indurated + hyperkeratotic (well differentiated)
  • Soft + ulceration (poorly differentiated)
  • 0.5 to 1.5 cm
  • Fair-skinned individuals: sun-exposed areas
  • In black individuals: legs, anus, and areas of chronic inflammation
  • White circles
  • White structureless areas
  • Masses of keratin
  • Hairpin and linear-irregular vessels
  • Keratinocytic dysplasia of the epidermis
  • No infiltration into dermis
  • Pleomorphic keratinocytes
  • Hyperchromatic nuclei
  • May be painful or pruritic
Keratoacanthoma
  • Macule
  • Papule
  • May have telangiectasias
  • Skin-colored
  • Mildly erythematous
  • Prominent keratinous core in the center of the nodule
  • 1 to 2.5 cm
  • Sun-exposed areas
  • Face, neck, hands, and arms
  • White circles
  • Keratin
  • Blood spots
  • White structureless zones
  • Well-differentiated squamous epithelium
  • Central keratin core
  • Epidermal hyperplasia + large eosinophilic keratinocytes
  • Dermal inflammatory infiltrate
  • Rapid growth (within weeks)
Merkel cell carcinoma
  • Intracutaneous nodule
  • Shiny
  • Flesh-colored or bluish-red
  • Firm
  • < 1 cm
  • Sun-exposed areas
  • Head and neck
  • Upper limbs and shoulder
  • Lower limbs and hip
  • Trunk
  • Milky red areas
  • Linear
  • Irregular vessels
  • Polymorphous vessels
  • Uniform cells with large basophilic nuclei
  • Single-cell necrosis
  • Frequent mitoses
  • Lymphovascular invasion
  • Perineural invasion
  • Epidermal involvement via pagetoid spread
  • Older individuals with light skin tones
  • Rapidly growing
Basal cell carcinoma Nodular basal cell carcinoma
  • Papule
  • Flesh-colored
  • Small bump
  • Variable
  • Face
  • Focused, bright red, and branching arborizing vessels
  • Loosely arranged blue-gray dots
  • Nest-like infiltration with basaloid cells
  • May have a "rolled" border
Superficial basal cell carcinoma
  • Patch
  • Erythematous
  • Scaly
  • 1 to > 10 cm
  • Sun-exposed areas
  • Head (cheek and nose)
  • Trunk
  • Superficial fine telangiectasia
  • Shiny white to red, translucent or opaque structureless areas
  • Multiple small erosions
  • Large, hyperchromatic, oval nuclei
  • Minimal cytoplasm
  • Small basaloid nodules
  • Higher incidence in men
Sclerosing basal cell carcinoma (morpheaform)
  • Papule
  • Plaque
  • Flesh-colored
  • Slightly erythematous
  • Firm
  • Indurated
  • Indistinct borders
  • Variable
  • Sun-exposed areas
  • Whitish backround
  • Few fine arborizing vessels
  • Multiple brown dots
  • Ulceration
  • Thin columns + small nodules
  • Highly collagenized stroma
  • Expression of smooth muscle protein alpha-actin in tumor stroma
Prurigo nodules[1]
  • Dome-shaped nodule
  • Flesh-colored
  • Erythematous
  • Brown/black
  • Firm
  • Few millimeters to several centimeters
  • Extensor surfaces of the arms and legs and on the trunk
  • Upper back, abdomen, and sacrum
  • White "starburst pattern" surrounding red/brown/yellow crusts
  • Erosions
  • Hyperkeratosis
  • Thick and compact orthohyperkeratosis
  • Irregular epidermal hyperplasia
  • Focal parakeratosis with irregular acanthosis
  • Nonspecific dermal infiltrate containing WBCs
  • Nodules range in number from few to hundreds
  • Worsened by heat, sweating, or irritation from clothing
Melanoma Melanoma in situ (Lentigo Maligna)
  • Macule
  • Variable (from light to dark brown, black, pink, red, or white)
  • Smooth
  • Around 1 cm
  • Sun-damaged skin of the head or neck
  • Asymmetric, pigmented follicular openings
  • Gray angulated lines
  • Gray areas, dots, and globules
  • Circle within a circle
  • atypical spindle shaped melanocytes
  • Arranged in single cells or in small nests along the dermoepidermal junction
  • Darkening of pigmentation, sharpening of borders, or emergence of nodular areas are signs of progression to lentigo maligna melanoma
Lentigo maligna melanoma
  • Macule
  • Brown/tan
  • Freckle-like
  • Variable
  • Chronically sun-damaged areas
  • Asymmetric, pigmented follicular openings
  • Gray angulated lines
  • Gray areas, dots, and globules
  • Circle within a circle
  • "Star-burst giant cells" in epidermis
  • "Swallow's nest" sign along the dermal-epidermal junction
  • Minimal cytoplasm
  • Pale nucleus with small nucleoli
  • Usually in older individuals
Superficial spreading melanoma[2]
  • Macule
  • Plaque with irregular borders
  • Variably pigmented (red, blue, black, gray, and white)
  • Thin
  • 1 mm to > 1 cm
  • Anywhere but usually:
    • Back (men and women)
    • Lower extremities (women)
  • Asymmetry of shape
  • > 2 colors
  • Asymmetry of structures
  • Asymmetric
  • Poorly circumscribed
  • Lack cellular maturation
  • Lateral (radial) growth before vertical (invasive) growth
Nodular melanoma[3][4]
  • Polypoid nodule
  • Dark color
  • Lump
  • 6mm to > 1 cm
  • Trunk
  • Head
  • Neck
  • Pigment network or pseudonetwork
  • Aggregated brown or black globules
  • Blue pigmentation within lesion
  • Small dotted or comma vessels
  • Cells proliferate downwards through the skin
  • Dermal growth in isolation or in association with an epidermal component
  • Two-thirds arise in normal skin, the rest in existing moles
  • Rapidly enlarging
Acral lentiginous melanoma[5]
  • Macule
  • Patch
  • Dark brown to black
  • Raised areas
  • Ulceration
  • Bleeding
  • Variable
  • Palmar
  • Plantar
  • Subungual
  • Mucosal surfaces
  • Parallel-ridge pattern
  • Irregular diffuse pigmentation
  • Asymmetric proliferation of single melanocytes at dermoepidermal junction
  • Most common among dark skinned individuals
Amelanotic melanoma[6]
  • Patch
  • Skin color
  • Slightly elevated borders
  • Around 6 mm
  • Sun-exposed areas
  • No melanin pigmentation
  • Dotted vessels
  • linear irregular vessels
  • Lesions not pigmented since they don't produce melanin
Common nevus[7]
  • Dome-shaped nodules
  • Hypopigmented
  • Smooth surface
  • Terminal hairs often present
  • 1 cm to > 20 cm
  • Sun-exposed areas above the waist
  • Comma-shaped or curved vessels
  • Structureless light brown background
  • Residual brown thick circles around the hair follicles
  • Multinucleated melanocytes
  • Melanocytes diffusely infiltrate dermis
  • Also called Miescher nevus
Blue nevus
  • Macules
  • Papules
  • Blue
  • Smooth
  • Variable
  • Head and neck,
  • Dorsal aspect of the distal extremities
  • Sacral area
  • Structureless blue pigmentation
  • Structureless blue and white or blue and brown on some occasions
  • Proliferation of dendritic, dermal, melanin-producing melanocytes
  • Also called Mongolian spots
Spitz nevus[8] Nonpigmented Spitz nevus
  • Nodules
  • Pink
  • Smooth
  • < 1 cm
  • Cheek
  • Coiled vessels
  • White network over a pink to reddish background
  • In children and adolescents
Reed-like Spitz[9]
  • Papule
  • Heavily pigmented
  • Smooth
  • < 1 cm
  • Head and neck
  • Upper and lower extremities
  • Structureless black to gray center
  • Hypopigmented follicular openings
  • Peripheral streaks
  • Pseudopods
  • Globules
  • Enlarged spindle melanocytes with polyangular form
  • "Ground glass" cytoplasm
  • Most commonly develops in children, adolescents, and young adults.
Solar lentigo
  • Multiple spots
  • Brown
  • Smooth
  • Around 5mm
  • Sun-exposed areas
  • Faint pigmented fingerprint structures
  • Structureless pattern
  • Light brown pseudonetwork with well-defined borders and a "moth-eaten" edge
  • melanin deposition in keratinocytes
  • linear arrangement of melanocytes at the dermoepidermal junction.
  • Associated with UV exposure and skin aging
Sebaceous hyperplasia
  • Papules
  • Skin-colored to brownish
  • Umbilicated
  • 2 - 6 mm
  • Forehead
  • Nose
  • Cheeks
  • Structureless yellow to whitish center surrounded by short linear "crown vessels"
  • Usually in middle-aged or older patients
Lichen planus-like keratosis
  • Papule
  • Plaque
  • Gray to brown
  • Prominent
  • Variable
  • Upper trunk
  • Shows a coarse or fine, gray to blue, granular pigmentation
  • Diffuse brownish gray granules
  • Hypergranulosis
  • Epidermal hyperplasia
  • Superficial bandlike infiltrate
  • Melanophages
  • Appearance depends on stage of evolution

SCC in situ: Frequently, there is associated thickening of the epidermis (acanthosis), as well as hyperkeratosis and parakeratosis of the stratum corneum. In contrast to SCC in situ, actinic keratoses demonstrate only partial-thickness epidermal dysplasia.

References

  1. Errichetti E, Piccirillo A, Stinco G (2015). "Dermoscopy of prurigo nodularis". J Dermatol. 42 (6): 632–4. doi:10.1111/1346-8138.12844. PMID 25808786.
  2. Argenziano G, Ferrara G, Francione S, Di Nola K, Martino A, Zalaudek I (2009). "Dermoscopy--the ultimate tool for melanoma diagnosis". Semin Cutan Med Surg. 28 (3): 142–8. doi:10.1016/j.sder.2009.06.001. PMID 19782937.
  3. Argenziano G, Soyer HP, Chimenti S, Talamini R, Corona R, Sera F; et al. (2003). "Dermoscopy of pigmented skin lesions: results of a consensus meeting via the Internet". J Am Acad Dermatol. 48 (5): 679–93. doi:10.1067/mjd.2003.281. PMID 12734496.
  4. Menzies, Scott W.; Moloney, Fergal J.; Byth, Karen; Avramidis, Michelle; Argenziano, Giuseppe; Zalaudek, Iris; Braun, Ralph P.; Malvehy, Josep; Puig, Susana; Rabinovitz, Harold S.; Oliviero, Margaret; Cabo, Horacio; Bono, Riccardo; Pizzichetta, Maria A.; Claeson, Magdalena; Gaffney, Daniel C.; Soyer, H. Peter; Stanganelli, Ignazio; Scolyer, Richard A.; Guitera, Pascale; Kelly, John; McCurdy, Olivia; Llambrich, Alex; Marghoob, Ashfaq A.; Zaballos, Pedro; Kirchesch, Herbert M.; Piccolo, Domenico; Bowling, Jonathan; Thomas, Luc; Terstappen, Karin; Tanaka, Masaru; Pellacani, Giovanni; Pagnanelli, Gianluca; Ghigliotti, Giovanni; Ortega, Blanca Carlos; Crafter, Greg; Ortiz, Ana María Perusquía; Tromme, Isabelle; Karaarslan, Isil Kilinc; Ozdemir, Fezal; Tam, Anthony; Landi, Christian; Norton, Peter; Kaçar, Nida; Rudnicka, Lidia; Slowinska, Monika; Simionescu, Olga; Di Stefani, Alessandro; Coates, Elliot; Kreusch, Juergen (2013). "Dermoscopic Evaluation of Nodular Melanoma". JAMA Dermatology. 149 (6): 699. doi:10.1001/jamadermatol.2013.2466. ISSN 2168-6068.
  5. Phan A, Dalle S, Touzet S, Ronger-Savlé S, Balme B, Thomas L (2010). "Dermoscopic features of acral lentiginous melanoma in a large series of 110 cases in a white population". Br J Dermatol. 162 (4): 765–71. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2133.2009.09594.x. PMID 19922528.
  6. Steglich RB, Meotti CD, Ferreira MS, Lovatto L, de Carvalho AV, de Castro CG (2012). "Dermoscopic clues in the diagnosis of amelanotic and hypomelanotic malignant melanoma". An Bras Dermatol. 87 (6): 920–3. PMC 3699915. PMID 23197217.
  7. Witt C, Krengel S (2010). "Clinical and epidemiological aspects of subtypes of melanocytic nevi (Flat nevi, Miescher nevi, Unna nevi)". Dermatol Online J. 16 (1): 1. PMID 20137743.
  8. Luo S, Sepehr A, Tsao H (2011). "Spitz nevi and other Spitzoid lesions part I. Background and diagnoses". J Am Acad Dermatol. 65 (6): 1073–84. doi:10.1016/j.jaad.2011.04.040. PMC 3217183. PMID 22082838.
  9. Pedrosa AF, Lopes JM, Azevedo F, Mota A (2016). "Spitz/Reed nevi: a review of clinical-dermatoscopic and histological correlation". Dermatol Pract Concept. 6 (2): 37–41. doi:10.5826/dpc.0602a07. PMC 4866625. PMID 27222770.