What did your nodular melanoma look like?

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asked Feb 24, 2022 in Diseases Conditions by Livenow3443 (1,900 points)
What did your nodular melanoma look like?

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answered Feb 24, 2022 by Milkshake11 (2,650 points)
My aunt had nodular melanoma and when she had nodular melanoma it appeared blackish blue in color but the color can vary from person to person.

The color that nodular melanoma is is can be either a blackish-blue, dark brown, or reddish-blue bump.

Some nodular melanoma nodules will have no color or will be flesh toned.

With melanoma you may not feel anything or you may feel a bit itchy from the melanoma when it appears on your skin.

When you have melanoma hard lumps may appear in your skin.

You may also lose your breath, have chest pain or noisy breathing or have a cough that won't go away.

You may feel pain in your liver (the right side of your stomach) Your bones may feel achy.

Depending on the melanoma the melanoma can be raised or flat.

Although the most common type of melanoma most often appears as a flat or barely raised lesion with irregular edges and different colors.

Fifty percent of these melanomas occur in preexisting moles.

Melanoma usually appears as a round, raised lump on the surface of the skin that is pink, red, brown or black and feels firm to touch.

It may develop a crusty surface that bleeds easily.

Stage 1 melanoma will appear and be no more than 1.0 millimeter thick (about the size of a sharpened pencil point), with or without an ulceration (broken skin).

There is no evidence that Stage I melanoma has spread to the lymph tissues, lymph nodes, or body organs.

Stage 1 Melanoma is the less severe stage and noninvasive stage of melanoma.

The Stage 1 melanoma is the noninvasive stage, which is also called melanoma “in situ,” meaning “in its original place.”

With stage I melanoma, the tumor's thickness is 1mm or less.

This tumor may or may not have ulcerated, and it isn't yet believed to have spread beyond the original site.

With appropriate treatment, Stage I melanoma is highly curable.

There is low risk for recurrence or metastasis.

The 5-year survival rate as of 2018 for local melanoma, including Stage I, is 98.4%.

In Stage I melanoma, the cancer cells are in both the first and second layers of the skin the epidermis and the dermis.

A melanoma tumor is considered Stage I if it is up to 2 mm thick, and it may or may not have ulceration.

There is no evidence the cancer has spread to lymph nodes or distant sites (metastasis).

Almost all people (almost 100%) will survive their melanoma for 1 year or more after they are diagnosed. around 90 out of every 100 people (around 90%) will survive their melanoma for 5 years or more after diagnosis.

The chance or risk that melanoma will recur after treatment of the first melanoma is grouped into the following categories: Low risk – less than 20% risk of recurrence.

Intermediate risk – 20–50% risk of recurrence.

High risk – greater than 50% risk of recurrence.

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