junctional nevus - translation to arabic
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junctional nevus - translation to arabic

TYPE OF MELANOCYTIC TUMOR
Moles and dysplastic nevi; Mole (skin); Mole (anatomy); Melanocytic naevi; Acquired melanocytic nevus; Mole removal; Compound nevus; Junctional nevus; Acquired nevus; Facial mole; Melanocytic nevi; Banal nevi; Nevocytic nevi; Electrocautery (Mole Removal); Electrocautery (Dermatology); Compound naevi; Compound naevus; Melanocytic naevus; Junctional naevus; Junctional naevi; Junctional nevi; Senescence and melanocytic nevi; Skin mole; Melanotic nevi; Melanotic nevus; Dermal nevus; Intradermal nevus; Blue melanocytic nevus
  • [[Abraham Lincoln]] famously had a mole on his right cheek
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  •  Intradermal melanocytic nevus (dermatoscopic image)
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junctional nevus         
‎ وَحْمَةُ مَوْصِلِيَّة‎
compound nevus         
‎ وَحْمَةٌ مُرَكَّبَة‎
melanocytic nevus         
‎ وَحْمَةٌ ميلانينيَّةُ الخلايا‎

Definition

naevus
['ni:v?s]
(US nevus)
¦ noun (plural naevi -v??, -vi:) a birthmark or a mole on the skin, especially a birthmark in the form of a raised red patch.
Origin
C19: from L.

Wikipedia

Melanocytic nevus

A melanocytic nevus (also known as nevocytic nevus, nevus-cell nevus and commonly as a mole) is usually a noncancerous condition of pigment-producing skin cells. It is a type of melanocytic tumor that contains nevus cells. Some sources equate the term mole with "melanocytic nevus", but there are also sources that equate the term mole with any nevus form.

The majority of moles appear during the first two decades of a person's life, with about one in every 100 babies being born with moles. Acquired moles are a form of benign neoplasm, while congenital moles, or congenital nevi, are considered a minor malformation or hamartoma and may be at a higher risk for melanoma. A mole can be either subdermal (under the skin) or a pigmented growth on the skin, formed mostly of a type of cell known as a melanocyte. The high concentration of the body's pigmenting agent, melanin, is responsible for their dark color. Moles are a member of the family of skin lesions known as nevi and can occur in all mammalian species, but have been documented most extensively in humans, dogs, and horses.