All conditions
23 of 33 conditions. Filtered: mvp.
Actinic keratosis
MVPAtopic dermatitis
EditorialMVPChronic, relapsing, pruritic inflammatory dermatosis with age-dependent morphology and prominent skin-of-color variants.
Basal cell carcinoma
MVPCentral centrifugal cicatricial alopecia (CCCA)
EditorialMVPPrimary scarring alopecia of the central scalp, disproportionately affecting Black women — early recognition is the only way to halt permanent hair loss.
Compound melanocytic nevus
MVPContact dermatitis (allergic and irritant)
EditorialMVPGeometric, pattern-matched dermatitis driven by contact with an allergen (type IV hypersensitivity) or an irritant — history and distribution are diagnostic; patch testing confirms allergens.
Dermal melanocytic nevus
MVPDermatofibroma
MVPDysplastic (Clark) nevus
MVPHemangioma
MVPInfantile hemangioma
EditorialMVPMost common tumor of infancy — GLUT-1-positive vascular proliferation with a predictable proliferation-involution arc; propranolol is first-line when treatment is indicated.
Junctional melanocytic nevus
MVPLichen planus
EditorialMVPT-cell-mediated inflammatory dermatosis classically defined by the 'four P's' (purple, pruritic, polygonal papules); lichen planus pigmentosus is a distinct skin-of-color variant.
Melanoma
EditorialMVPMalignant tumor of melanocytes; acral lentiginous is the dominant subtype in Black, Asian, and Hispanic patients — often diagnosed late, with worse prognosis stage-for-stage.
Melanoma in situ
MVPMelanoma, invasive
MVPPsoriasis
EditorialMVPChronic immune-mediated inflammatory skin disease with distinct morphology in skin of color (violaceous rather than salmon-pink); treatable to clear with modern biologics.
Seborrheic keratosis
MVPSolar lentigo
MVPSquamous cell carcinoma in situ
MVPSquamous cell carcinoma, invasive
MVPStevens-Johnson syndrome / Toxic epidermal necrolysis
EditorialMVPLife-threatening drug-induced mucocutaneous reaction with full-thickness epidermal necrosis; skin pain out of proportion and dusky macules are the earliest clues — minutes matter.
Tinea capitis
EditorialMVPDermatophyte infection of the scalp, overwhelmingly a disease of Black children in the US (Trichophyton tonsurans); systemic antifungal therapy is required and household contacts must be addressed.