Monday, November 16, 2009

Why do we get skin tags?

I am getting skin tags on my neck, stomach and even breasts. Someone told me they are from changing hormones but I don't really have any other symptoms

Why do we get skin tags?
Where do skin tags occur?





Skin tags can occur almost anywhere there is skin. However, favorite areas for tags are the eyelids, neck, armpits (axillae), upper chest, and groin.





Who tends to get skin tags?





They are much more common with age beginning in middle age and they tend to be somewhat more prevalent in women than men.





Is a skin tag a tumor?





Yes, it is in the sense that it is a growth. However, it is a benign (harmless and not a malignant) condition.





What does a skin tag look like under a microscope?





The outer layer of the skin (the epidermis) shows overgrowth (hyperplasia) and it encloses an underlying layer of skin (the dermis) in which the normally-present collagen fibers appear abnormally loose and swollen.





What problems do skin tags cause?





Usually none. This tiny skin growth generally causes no symptoms unless it is repeatedly irritated as, for example, by the collar or in the crotch.





How are skin tags treated?





In cases in which a skin tag is irritated or cosmetically unwanted, treatment may be done by freezing the tag with liquid nitrogen, tying off the tag with a thread or suture so as to cut off the blood supply, or cutting off (excising) the tag with a scalpel or scissors.





Is there another medical name for a skin tag?





A skin tag is medically also termed a cutaneous papilloma or an acrochordon. However, a skin tag is best known as a skin tag.


Skin Tag At A Glance





* A skin tag is a common but harmless skin growth.


* Skin tags are frequently found on the eyelids, neck, chest, armpits, and groin.


* Treatments include freezing, tying off with a thread or suture, or cutting off.
Reply:my doc told me hormones ... i was pregnant when i got them and then they went away but if they dont then tie a string around them they will die and fall of .by doing that you are cutting off the blood supply to them
Reply:They're not from changing hormones. They appear to be genetic. You will likely have them if family members do. No one in my family has had them, nor have I. A close friend of mine has been getting them since his twenties, and a number of other family members have them as well. There does appear to be an increase in tags as people get older (which may account for the hormone theory.)
Reply:I have recently got these were my gold chain lays on my neck,,never had these before,,am 42 don't know if age is a issue but and finding these around my chain area, and drive me nuts,,,


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