3 Minutes Might Save Your Life
Life is busy. We all have commitments that dominate our time: project deadlines, work meetings, social outings, PTA, orthodontic appointments for the kids, vet visits for the pets...
Read MoreLife is busy. We all have commitments that dominate our time: project deadlines, work meetings, social outings, PTA, orthodontic appointments for the kids, vet visits for the pets...
Read MoreAre you thinking of getting a tattoo? This week a patient asked me if there was anything I would look for in a tattoo shop. So here it is, some advice from Issaquah dermatologist Arlo Miller on tattoos!...
Read MoreLet's face it, men need some help at skin cancer prevention. Only about 1/2 of men report using sunscreen in the last year. And we're not talking about using sunscreen everyday, we're talking about using ANY sunscreen in the last year. Why are men so awful at skin cancer prevention?...
Read MoreA major European study recently combined the results of 27 other studies over the last 30 years in Europe looking at the relationship between tanning and melanoma. They confirmed several things that we suspected were true: Any use of indoor tanning is associated with a 20% higher risk of melanoma Tanning before the age of 35 doubles that risk But, they also found some very interesting new facts: Each exposure to a tanning bed is associated with a 1.8% increased risk of melanoma. The risk of melanoma continues to rise, particularly among young women About 500 people in the European Community countries where the study was done...
Read MoreLast month, the FDA issued an advisory statement recommending that you do not put sunscreen on babies. Its not because babies are somehow immune to sun damage and we shouldn't worry about them developing skin cancer. No, the FDA thought "...
Read MoreQ: I've actively tanned for the last 11 years. What are my chances of getting skin cancer now? What's the chance of me getting skin cancer because I've been naturally tanning since I was 6. I am 17 now? What can I do to lower my future risk? Is it too late??? A: Intentional tanning will have certainly increased your risk, but its very difficult to put a number on it. You can't change the past, but you can exert control over your future. So, what you want to do now is to make that behavior part of the past and take...
Read MoreQ: What are my chances of getting melanoma a second time? I had melanoma 9 years ago...
Read MoreQ: I've had a melanoma that penetrated about 3 mm into the dermis of my leg. It was removed but micro cells were discovered in sentinel lymph node biopsies in my groin and knee. I went thru standard Interferon treatments and it's now been more than 6 years since my surgery to remove it from my leg. I do go to a Dermatologist annually and there are no obvious signs of recurrence. I feel fine but the survival statistics plus biopsies make it hard to forget that it could have spread and is lurking in places unknown. Is there anything...
Read MoreQ: This sounds ridiculous, but anywhere I rub my skin or scratch it I get big welts and the more I rub it the bigger the welts get and the more it starts itching. I have tried different laundry soaps and body washes but the end results are always the same. Help! -patient from Longview WA A: This isn't ridiculous at all! What you are describing sounds like dermatographism: Its basically the ability to make hives or welts by rubbing. Patients can pretty much play tic-tac-toe on their thigh if they wanted to. Its typically harmless, but it can really bother some patients,...
Read MoreQ: Read study done in Germany that links fathers to sons gene related to melanoma genesis in families. Any more research done on it yet? Reader from Vancouver, WA A: Many studies have shown a genetic link, and some of the responsible genes are known (and can be tested for), but these mutations are only responsible for a small number of melanomas. In 90% of melanomas, the genetic changes leading to cancer are somatic mutations, meaning that they were not inherited and developed from scratch in the affected person. Here is where it gets interesting: Exposure to ultraviolet light will generate many of these mutations. ...
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