Types Of Skin
Cancer
Types Of Skin
Cancer - Information
The other day, I was taken by the hair coloring of a clerk at
the local store. I commented on how beautiful it was, with
the dark base and the natural-looking streaks, as if the sun had
touched her alone; and we began a conversation of how when we were
younger we would not have to use any hair dyes: we just sprayed
SunIn on our hair and laid out in the sun for an hour or two.
This of course led us to discussing the near impossibility of doing
that now, as we have blasted the ozone layer(s) so hard we have
created a direct line between us and the harsher (more deadly) rays
of the sun (and no, SunIn is a pump spray, not an aerosol, so we
didn’t have to go there with culpability and irony and all).
But you probably didn’t come here to read about hair coloring
techniques that are sun-free or chemical free, for that matter…at
least not specifically. You came looking for information on
the different types of skin cancer. The speculation and
theory does hold some evidence against chemicals in—ahem—health and
beauty products; and it does point to the sun’s “damaging rays” as
a possible cause, etc., but here, since we aren’t medical
professionals, specialist, or experts, the info on the types of
skin cancer is going to be basic and absent of finger-pointing, if
you will:
There are three types of skin cancer: Basal
Cell Carcinoma (a.k.a. non-melanoma skin cancer); Squamous Cell
Carcinoma; and Melanoma.
Melanoma (also, Cutaneous Melanoma, Malignant Melanoma) – Cancer
cells are growing in the melanocytes, the cells that are
responsible for skin pigmentation. According to University of
Maryland medicine and other experts, of all of the
typesofskincancer, Melanoma is “the rarest and the most
virulent….” It is typically found in people with fair skin,
light hair, and/or light eyes, though it is possible in others with
different complexions, and as the experts above also assert, does
not exempt those with dark brown or black skin.
Types Of Skin
Cancer - Tips and Advice
Identifiable symptoms include, most commonly, a mole changing
color, size, shape, or state (starts oozing or bleeding), or a mole
that UMM notes “feels itchy, hard, lumpy, swollen, or tender to the
touch.”
Squamous Cell Carcinoma—Also called non-melanoma skin cancer,
Squamous Cell Carcinoma usually begins as a red-looking, scaly
patch or patches of skin, or can appear as nodules. Of the
three typesofskincancer, Squamous, affecting Caucasians, usually
fair-complected, is the second most common and shows up, typically,
on the ears (ear-rims), face, lips, and mouth.
Basal Cell Carcinoma – The second of the types of skin cancer,
Basal Cell Cancer, typically starts as a “small, fleshy bump or
nodule,” most commonly found on the head, neck, and/or hands. Of
the three types of skin cancer, Basal Cell Carcinoma, which is
typically found in Caucasians, say those at UMM, make up “more than
90 percent in the U.S..
My mother had the second most common of the types of skin
cancer, on her lip, and while we at first teased her that it was
herpes, she was smart enough to know it was a “sun blister” and
quick enough to catch it by going to a specialist. That’s the
good news, to give you hope when you bemoan the loss of days
picnicking, swimming, and “bathing” under the wonderful sun.
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