What is Skin Cancer?
Skin cancer is defined as any malignant growth that may manifest on the skin. There are three major kinds of skin cancers which include melanoma, basal cell cancer and squamos cell cancer. Because the tumours will normally develop on the epidermis or the outermost layer of the skin, identifying the cancerous growth is relatively easy. Skin cancer is very widespread and is the most apparent cancer in human populations. However it has a significantly lower incidence of death because of the probability that it will be caught in the early phases of the disease. Melanoma is the most destructive kind of skin cancer but is less prevalent than the two other forms of this disease. In many manifestations of the disease, the cancer does not always spread immediately or at all.
There are quite a few established causes of skin cancer. The most widely accepted cause is over exposure to harmful ultraviolet rays or sunlight. The list below highlights some of the main causes:
• Suffering from any deficiency of the immune system, that is having a disease that subjects you to reduced immune system function, will elevate the risk for developing skin cancer. This decrease in the ability of the immune system to function may also be because of consuming drugs to fight an autoimmune disease or after having an organ transplant. These drugs will be used to lower the immune system response in the case of autoimmune diseases that trigger the immune system to attack its own cells and organs, for example in people with lupus. These drugs are also used after an organ transplant to make certain that the body will not reject the newly transplanted organ.
• Being exposed to atypically high levels of X-rays may induce the development of skin cancer.
• Using tanning booths to get an artificial tan has been broadly accepted as a likely cause of the disease.
• There are some chemicals that have been discovered to cause the development of skin cancers. These will normally include polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and arsenic. It is speculated that polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons may possibly be inhaled because of low levels of contamination in the air, consumed in foods and by touching any surface that is saturated with the chemical.
• Some people are said to be at a higher risk, such as lighter skinned people, people with blond or red hair and green or blue eyes. Having freckles or being prone to sun burn may also heighten a person’s risk for developing this type of cancer.
• Having a genetic irregularity that does not allow the development of pigment can increase the risk for the disease. These conditions include albinism and xeroderma pigmentosum.
• If an individual has already had skin cancer the risk is much higher.
• If you had at least one very extreme case of sunburn in childhood the risk for developing this type of cancer is higher.
• Having a family history of the disease is also a well known risk factor.
• If you have many moles these can become cancerous growths on the skin’s surface. Some individuals choose to have any moles removed to decrease the likelihood that they will become cancerous growths.