Thanks to Dr Charlotte Proby for her permission and the photography. They usually occur on areas of skin exposed to the sun like the scalp or ear. Squamous cell skin cancers can vary in how they look. It might look skin coloured, waxy, like a scar or thickened area of skin that's very slowly getting bigger. Pronounced mor-fee-ic, this type of basal cell skin cancer may look like a sore area on the skin that doesn’t heal. They can look like warts or sometimes a melanoma. Pigmented basal cell cancers have dark areas, often brown, blue or grey in colour. Sometimes they have a sore (ulcerated) area and it may also have fluid filled sacs (cystic). You can often also see their blood vessels. Nodular basal cell cancers can look see through (translucent) and shiny.
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