A team of researchers at Wake Forest University School of Medicine has created a battery-free wearable patch that is capable of helping to detect skin cancer earlier, potentially saving lives.
You should have a baseline visit with a dermatologist who can check your skin from head to toe, including hard-to-see spots ...
That stubborn spot on your face that refuses to go away may just not be that usual pimple, after all. Every year, millions ...
The AAD’s Firefighter Skin Cancer Checks Program gives dermatologists a chance to help the heroes who keep our communities safe by providing skin checks to firefighters at elevated occupational risk.
Hosting an AAD skin cancer check event is a great way to demonstrate your commitment and passion to the community and the specialty. The skin cancer check program is the Academy's longest-standing ...
DermaSensor announced newly published studies supporting the performance of its device for evaluating suspicious skin lesions ...
A radioactive paste that is applied to skin cancer is proving to be successful and could potentially rule out the need for ...
Keratin is the tough protein that forms hair, nails and hooves. It’s also responsible for something far stranger: human horns ...
WASHINGTON (AP) — Former President Joe Biden on Monday completed a round of radiation therapy treatment for the aggressive form of prostate cancer he was diagnosed with after leaving office, a ...
A new wearable patch can detect early signs of the deadliest form of skin cancer. The wireless device allows screening of ...
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. — Researchers at Wake Forest University's School of Medicine have developed a battery-free, chip-less ...