Department of Dermatology and Cutaneous Surgery (Dr. Usatine) and Department of Family and Community Medicine (Drs. Usatine and Shama), University of Texas Health, San Antonio; Memorial Sloan Kettering Skin Cancer Center, Hauppauge, NY (Dr. Marghoob); Department of Dermatology and Cutaneous Surgery, University of Miami, Fla (Dr. Jaimes) usatine@uthscsa.edu
Dr. Marghoob discloses that he provides free advice to Heine, Canfield, and 3GEN regarding their products. He has also received honoraria to speak for 3GEN and to test equipment for Heine, 3GEN, and Canfield.
The other authors reported no potential conflict of interest relevant to this article.
Sebaceous hyperplasia is the overgrowth of sebaceous glands. It can mimic BCC on the face. Sebaceous hyperplasia presents with multiple vessels in a crown-like arrangement that do not cross the center of the lesion. The sebaceous glands resemble popcorn (FIGURE 8).
Clear-cell acanthoma is a benign erythematous epidermal tumor usually found on the leg with a string-of-pearls pattern. This pattern is vascular so the pearls are red in color (FIGURE 9).
Malignant nonmelanocytic lesions
BCC is the most common type of skin cancer. Features often include:
spoke-wheel-like structures or concentric structures (FIGURE 10A)