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Home :: Solar Lent go

Lent go Malign Melanoma, Solar Lent go, Senile Lent go, Lent go Simplex Cause, Symptoms and Treatment remedies

Lent go malign is a brown patch, generally on the face of the elderly. This precursor lesion leads to lent go malign melanoma. Clinically it is a spreading brown patch, often with considerable variation in color. It is absolutely flat. It can slowly expand for decades. Over time, a nodule can develop within it, lent go malign melanoma.

Lent go malign melanoma (LEMMA) is the least common type (about 4%) and the slowest growing. It generally has a long radial spread time often reaching large diameters of 3-6 cm or greater and confined to the upper skin layer (epidermis). This is the first stage called lent go malign and can last for years. During this stage the melanoma remains in situ. For this reason metastasis is rare. The second stage is called lent go malign melanoma and begins when the existing lent go malign enters a vertical growth phase.

Lent go (pl. Lentigines) is a common benign condition. It is characterized by areas of melanocytic proliferation, and the hyper pigmentation of the epidermal basal cell layer in a linear fashion. Lent go - a type of freckle that is a small tan, brown, or black spot which tends to be darker than the usual (aphelia-type) freckles and which do not fade in the winter. This kind of spot is referred to as lent go simplex.

Solar lent go is the medical term for "liver spots." These brownish, flat, round or oval spots are a result of sun exposure over many years and usually start showing up when people hit their 40s. The good news is that they are not cancerous, but they can be treated for cosmetic reasons.

The risk of lent go malign melanoma increases as the number of years of residence in sunnier climates (egg, southern United States) increases, and risk increases with increased hours of exposure to sunlight, increased amount of actinic damage, and a history of non melanoma skin cancer. Many authors consider lent go malign to be a privative lesion induced by long-term cumulative ultraviolet injury. Conceptually, the term melanoma is used when atypical melanocytic invade the rich vascular and lymphatic networks of the dermis, thereby establishing metastasis potential. Lent go malign is mostly seen in patients 50 to 80 years old and accounts for ten to 15 percent of skin cancer cases.

Differential Diagnosis

  • Seborrhea Kurtosis
  • Pigmented solar kurtosis
  • Lent go malign
  • Freckles

What is the treatment of Lent go?

The doctor may evaluate sites of lent go malign, the speed of progression and the general health and fitness of the patient when choosing a treatment. Surgery, radiation therapy and chemotherapy may all be used in the treatment of lent go malign. Surgery rarely cures the disease, and may be used as a last resort after other treatments have failed. After the initial diagnosis, the doctor may recommend the patient be examined every three months for two years, and twice a year thereafter.

The treatment of choice of lent go malign is surgical excision if the lesion is small. Radiation therapy is frequently the treatment of choice in the elderly with an extensive lesion. These lesions should not be treated with liquid nitrogen cry therapy, as a rule, because the dysphasic melanocytic go down hair follicles and deep recurrence post-cry therapy is common

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