Nevus

Not to be confused with Naevius, Nevis, or Nevius.
Nevus

A mole on a leg
Classification and external resources
Specialty cardiology
ICD-10 I78.1
ICD-9-CM 448.1, 216.0-216.9
MeSH D009506

Nevus, also known as a mole,[1] is the medical term for sharply circumscribed[2] and chronic lesions of the skin or mucosa. These lesions are commonly named birthmarks or beauty marks. Nevi are benign by definition. However, 25% of malignant melanomas (a skin cancer) arise from pre-existing nevi.[3] Using the term nevus and nevi loosely, most physicians and dermatologists are actually referring to a variant of nevus called the "melanocytic nevus", which are composed of melanocytes. Histologically, melanocytic nevi are distinguished from lentigines (also a type of benign pigmented macule) by the presence of nests of melanocytes, which lentigines (plural form of lentigo) lack.

Classification

Epidermal nevi are derived from keratinocytes or derivatives of keratinocytes. Connective tissue nevi are derived from connective tissue cells like adipocytes and fibroblasts. Vascular nevi are derived from structures of the blood vessels. See birthmark for a more complete discussion

Melanocytic nevus

Main article: Melanocytic nevus

Epidermal nevus

Connective tissue nevus

Vascular nevus

Diagnosis of nevi

A modern polarized dermatoscope

Clinical diagnosis of a melanocytic nevus from other nevi can be made with the naked eye using the ABCD guideline, or using dermatoscopy. The main concern is distinguishing between a benign nevus, a dysplastic nevus, and a melanoma. Other skin tumors can resemble a melanocytic nevus clinically, such as a seborrheic keratosis, pigmented basal cell cancer, hemangiomas, and sebaceous hyperplasia. A skin biopsy is required when clinical diagnosis is inadequate or when malignancy is suspected.

Normal evolution or maturation of melanocytic nevi

All melanocytic nevi will change with time - both congenital and acquired nevi. The "normal" maturation is evident as elevation of the lesion from a flat macule to a raised papule. The color change occurs as the melanocytes clump and migrate from the surface of the skin (epidermis) down deep into the dermis. The color will change from even brown, to speckled brown, and then losing the color and becomes flesh colored or pink. During the evolution, uneven migration can make the nevi look like melanomas, and dermatoscopy can help in differentiation between the benign and malignant lesions.[4]

Etymology

A nevus may also be spelled naevus. The plural is nevi or naevi. The word is from nævus, Latin for "birthmark".

See also

References

  1. "Common Moles, Dysplastic Nevi, and Risk of Melanoma". National Cancer Institute. November 1, 2011. Retrieved 30 June 2015.
  2. "nevus" at Dorland's Medical Dictionary
  3. Sam, Amir H.; James T.H. Teo (2010). Rapid Medicine. Wiley-Blackwell. ISBN 1405183233.
  4. Archived April 15, 2008, at the Wayback Machine.

External links

Look up nevus in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
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