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Prolong sun safety with regular skin check-ups

Yet even if you check your skin regularly, sun protection remains essential to skin cancer prevention.

Protecting your skin against the harmful rays of the sun only goes halfway against preventing cancer.

The other half is doing regular skin checks to ensure you nip any worrying skin issues early in the bud.

You should examine your skin, head to toe, once a month, looking for any suspicious lesions.

Self-exams can help you detect potential skin cancers early enough to be completely cured.

If melanoma, the deadliest form of skin cancer, is recognised and treated early, it is almost always curable, but if it is not, the cancer can advance and spread to other parts of the body where it becomes hard to treat and can be fatal.

Often resembling moles, the majority of melanomas are black or brown, but they can also be skin-coloured, pink, red, purple, blue or white.

Finding an atypical mole will often give you the first clue that something’s amiss.

That’s why it’s important to know your skin very well and to recognise any changes in the moles on your body.

However, for a successful self-exam, you need to know what you’re looking for, and to aid this, physicians have developed specific strategies for early recognition of the disease.”

One strategy is to look for the ABCDE signs of melanoma.

If you see one or more of these signs, make an appointment with a physician immediately.
• A is for asymmetry. If you draw a line through the mole, the two halves should match. If not, check it out.
• B is for borders. Since the borders of an early melanoma tend to be uneven.
• C is for colour. Having a variety of colours is another warning signal. A number of different shades of brown, tan or black could appear in one, or also become red, blue or some other colour.
• D is for diameter. Melanomas are usually larger in diameter than the size of a pencil’s eraser but they may sometimes be smaller when first detected.
• E is for evolving. As any change in size, shape, colour, elevation or another trait, or any new symptom such as bleeding, itching or crusting, points to danger.

As a general rule, to spot either melanomas or non-melanoma skin cancers, take note of any new moles or growths, and any existing growths that begin to grow or change significantly in anyway.

Lesions that change, itch, bleed or don’t heal are also alarm signals.

Another strategy physicians developed is the Ugly Duckling sign, based on the concept that these melanomas look different compared to surrounding moles.

The idea is that the patient’s ‘normal’ moles resemble each other, while the potential melanoma looks or feels different to the patient’s other moles, or changes differently to the patient’s other moles.

While everyone is at risk for melanoma, increased risk depends on several factors, including sun exposure, number of moles on the skin, skin type and family history.

Heredity plays a major role in melanoma as about one in every 10 patients diagnosed with the disease has a family member with a history of melanoma.

Each person with a first-degree relative diagnosed with melanoma has a 50 per cent greater chance of developing the disease than people who do not have a family history of the disease.

Once a melanoma is diagnosed, the first step in treatment is the removal of the melanoma, the standard method being by cutting it out.

Surgery has made great advances in the past decade, and much less tissue is removed than in the past.

Patients do just as well after the lesser surgery, which is easier to tolerate and produces a smaller scar.

In most cases, the surgery for thin melanomas can easily be done in the doctor’s office or as an outpatient procedure under local anaesthesia.

Stitches remain in place for one to two weeks and scars are usually small and improve over time.

Yet even if you check your skin regularly, sun protection remains essential to skin cancer prevention, as about 90 per cent of non-melanoma skin cancers and 65 per cent of melanomas are associated with exposure to UV radiation from the sun.

Also read: Protect their skin these holidays

Lighter skin more prone to cancer

Skin cancer myths debunked

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Stacy Slatter

News editor Stacy Slatter is a seasoned journalist with 20 years of experience in community news. Throughout the years, she has covered a wide range of topics, from crime, municipal news and human interest stories, to sports and community events. Stacy also has extensive sub-editing experience.

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