Skin Tags and Moles – When to Worry

Skin tags (acrochordons)

  • Small, soft, skin-colored flaps on the neck, armpits, eyelids, and groin.
  • Harmless and very common, especially with age, friction, pregnancy, and in people with insulin resistance.
  • Removal is optional and for comfort or appearance (snip, freeze, cautery in clinic). Do not attempt DIY cutting—risk of bleeding/infection.

Moles (nevi)

  • Benign clusters of pigment cells. Most people have 10–40.
  • Can be flat or raised, pink to dark brown. New moles are uncommon after age 30.

When to get a mole checked (ABCDE and “Ugly Duckling”)

  • A: Asymmetry (one half unlike the other)
  • B: Border irregular (ragged or notched)
  • C: Color varied (tan, brown, black, red, white, or blue areas)
  • D: Diameter larger than 6 mm (pencil eraser)—but small melanomas exist
  • E: Evolving (any change in size, shape, color, itching, bleeding, crusting)
  • Ugly Duckling: a spot that looks different from your other moles.

Other red flags:

  • A new mole after age 30.
  • A mole that bleeds or won’t heal.
  • A dark streak in a nail, especially if widening or with pigment on the nearby cuticle/skin.

Self-care and monitoring

  • Take clear photos every few months of moles you’re watching.
  • Practice sun safety: shade, protective clothing, and broad-spectrum SPF 30+.
  • Avoid tanning beds.

Removal and biopsy

  • If a mole looks suspicious, your clinician may do a small biopsy (quick office procedure) to check under the microscope.
  • Cosmetic removal of benign moles/skin tags is possible; ask about costs, scarring, and options.

 

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