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  2. Dysplastic nevus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dysplastic_nevus

    A benign nevus is read as (or understood as) having no cytologic or architectural atypia. An atypical mole is read as having architectural atypia and having (mild, moderate, or severe) cytologic (melanocytic) atypia. [12] Usually, cytologic atypia is of more important clinical concern than architectural atypia.

  3. Melanocytic nevus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Melanocytic_nevus

    A melanocytic nevus (also known as nevocytic nevus, nevus-cell nevus, and commonly as a mole) [1] [2] is usually a noncancerous condition of pigment-producing skin cells. It is a type of melanocytic tumor that contains nevus cells . [ 2 ]

  4. Dysplastic nevus syndrome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dysplastic_nevus_syndrome

    The features include: 1) two or more clinically atypical nevi, 2) more than 100 nevi in patients between 20 and 50 years of age, 3) more than 50 nevi in patients under 20 years of age or more than 50 years of age, 4) more than one nevus in buttocks or instep, 5) nevi on the anterior scalp, 6) one or more pigmented lesions in the iris.

  5. Benign melanocytic nevus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benign_melanocytic_nevus

    However, a melanocytic nevus is benign, and melanoma is malignant. Most melanocytic nevi never evolve into a cancer, with the lifetime risk for an individual nevus being 1 in 3000 for men and 1 in 11 000 for women. [5] Moreover, dermatologists have a standardized system for determining whether a skin lesion is suspicious for malignant melanoma.

  6. Nevus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nevus

    Nevus (pl.: nevi) is a nonspecific medical term for a visible, circumscribed, chronic lesion of the skin or mucosa. [1] The term originates from nævus , which is Latin for " birthmark "; however, a nevus can be either congenital (present at birth) or acquired.

  7. List of skin conditions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_skin_conditions

    Melanocytic nevi and neoplasms are caused by either a proliferation of (1) melanocytes, or (2) nevus cells, a form of melanocyte that lack dendritic processes. [78] [79] Acral nevus (melanocytic nevus of acral skin, melanocytic nevus with intraepidermal ascent of cells) Amelanotic blue nevus (hypomelanotic blue nevus) Becker's nevus; Balloon ...

  8. Spitz Nevus (Mole): How It Looks and When to Remove One

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/spitz-nevus-mole-looks...

    Spitz nevus is the medical name for a benign mole. They share a similar appearance with other moles, some that are cancerous. Learn more here.

  9. Nevus cell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nevus_cell

    Nevus cells are a variant of melanocytes. [1]: 684 They are larger than typical melanocytes, do not have dendrites, and have more abundant cytoplasm with coarse granules. [2] They are usually located at the dermoepidermal junction or in the dermis of the skin. Dermal nevus cells can be further classified: type A (epithelioid) dermal nevus cells ...