Sign in

or Register now

SkinCancerConnection.com

See all of our health sites at www.HealthCentral.com
Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Sun-Damaged Skin

What Is It? & Symptoms

Monday, Aug. 27, 2007; 7:43 PM

Copyright Harvard Health Publications 2007

What Is It?

Table of Contents

Although most people love the warmth and light of the sun, too much sun exposure can significantly damage human skin. The sun's heat dries out areas of unprotected skin and to deplete the skin's supply of natural lubricating oils. In addition, the sun's ultraviolet (UV) radiation can cause burning and long-term changes in the skin's structure.

The most common types of sun damage to the skin are:

  • Dry skin - Sun-exposed skin can gradually lose moisture and essential oils, making it appear dry, flaky and prematurely wrinkled, even in younger people.

  • Sunburn - Sunburn is the common name for the skin injury that sppears immediately after the skin is exposed to UV radiation. Mild sunburn causes only painful reddening of the skin, but more severe cases can produce tiny fluid-filled bumps (vesicles) or larger blisters.

  • Actinic keratosis - This is a tiny bump that feels like sandpaper or a small, scaly patch of sun-damaged skin that has a pink, red, yellow or brownish tint. Unlike suntan markings or sunburns, an actinic keratosis does not usually go away unless it is frozen, chemically treated, or removed by a doctor. An actinic keratosis develops in areas of skin that have undergone repeated or long-term exposure to the sun's UV light, and it is a warning sign of increased risk of skin cancer. About 10%–15% of actinic keratoses eventually change into squamous cell cancers of the skin.

  • Long-term changes in the skin's collagen (a structural protein) - These changes include photoaging (premature aging of the skin because of sun exposure) and actinic purpura (bleeding from fragile blood vessels beneath the skin surface). In photoaging, the skin develops wrinkles and fine lines because of changes in the collagen of a deep layer of the skin called the dermis. In actinic purpura, UV radiation damages the structural collagen that supports the walls of the skin's tiny blood vessels. Particularly in older people, this collagen damage makes blood vessels more fragile and more likely to rupture following a slight impact.

  • < Page
  • 1

Ask a Question

Get answers from our experts and community members.

Answer a Question

My dermatologist didn't do a very thorough exam, what should I expect in an exam?

Answer This View all questions >
Free Newsletter
Get weekly updates, news alerts and more on Skin Cancer and related health conditions.