How would you treat this upper chest lesion?
Case discussion: A 55-year-old female presented with 1-2 years' history of slow growth of an asymptomatic, non-tender lesion on the upper chest.
Case discussion: A 55-year-old female presented with 1-2 years' history of slow growth of an asymptomatic, non-tender lesion on the upper chest.
Case discussion: An asymptomatic 70-year-old male presented for a total body skin exam. A small pink patch was noted. What would you do?
Video: experienced skin cancer doctor Tony Dicker gives valuable advice on how to perform an H-Plasty in order to close defects on the scalp.
Case discussion: 5x5mm lesion discovered on the back of the neck of an 68-year-old male patient during his routine full skin examination. What would you do?
A study tested whether a skin cancer nurse's powers of discrimination would allow her to safely screen out patients whose lesions were definitely benign.
This is the Bob Marley story. Passionate about skin cancer prevention, detection and treatment, we share this story every time we teach about melanoma.