title: Dermatologist
slug: dermatologist
aliases:
  - Skin Doctor
  - Skin Specialist
  - Derm
category: Healthcare
tags:
  - dermatology
  - skin
  - dermoscopy
  - medicine
  - pattern-recognition
difficulty: expert
summary: >-
  Reads the skin by morphology and dermoscopy to separate the benign mole from
  the melanoma and the harmless rash from the lethal drug reaction, choosing
  what to biopsy and what to watch.
contributors:
  - soul-atlas
last_reviewed: null
provenance: ai-generated
created: '2026-06-26'
updated: '2026-06-26'
related:
  - slug: physician
    type: prerequisite
    note: dermatology is a specialty built on internal medicine training
  - slug: pathologist
    type: collaboration
    note: dermatopathology confirms the tissue diagnosis in daily correlation
  - slug: oncologist
    type: collaboration
    note: co-manages advanced melanoma with immunotherapy
  - slug: surgeon
    type: adjacent
    note: reconstructs large defects after skin-cancer excision
  - slug: registered-nurse
    type: collaboration
    note: runs surveillance clinics and biologic infusion programs
specializations:
  - Dermatopathologist
  - Mohs Surgeon
  - Pediatric Dermatologist
  - Cosmetic Dermatologist
country_variants: []
sources:
  - title: Fitzpatrick's Dermatology in General Medicine
    kind: book
  - title: Dermatology (Bolognia)
    kind: book
  - title: AAD Clinical Guidelines
    kind: standard
status: draft
reviewers: []
sections:
  - heading: Purpose
    markdown: >-
      A dermatologist exists to read the largest organ of the body — the skin —
      as

      both a surface to be diagnosed and a window into what is happening beneath
      it.

      The skin shows everything: the benign mole and the melanoma that will kill
      in

      two years, the rash that is an annoyance and the rash that is the first
      sign of a

      lethal drug reaction, the lesion of a systemic disease declaring itself on
      the

      forearm before the patient feels sick. The dermatologist's reason for
      being is

      to look — closely, with trained eyes and a dermatoscope — and to know
      which of

      the hundred things on the differential is the one that must come off and
      go to

      pathology today, and which can be reassured and watched.
  - heading: Core Mission
    markdown: >-
      Recognize the lesion or eruption for what it is by pattern, decide what to
      biopsy

      and what to leave, and catch the skin cancer and the dangerous drug
      reaction

      early enough to change the outcome — without cutting into every benign
      mole.
  - heading: Primary Responsibilities
    markdown: >-
      The visible work is looking at skin; the actual work is pattern
      recognition under

      the constant threat of the missed melanoma. A dermatologist takes a
      focused

      history (onset, evolution, symptoms, drugs, sun exposure, family history),

      examines the whole skin surface including the scalp, nails, and mucosa,
      applies

      dermoscopy to magnify and structure the diagnosis, and decides whether a
      lesion

      needs biopsy, excision, monitoring, or nothing. They classify and treat

      inflammatory disease — psoriasis, eczema, acne, the autoimmune blistering

      disorders — often for years. They perform skin surgery, including Mohs for

      high-risk cancers, and read their own and the pathologist's slides in

      clinicopathologic correlation. Underneath it all is morphology: the
      precise

      description of what a lesion looks like, because the name follows the
      description.
  - heading: Guiding Principles
    markdown: >-
      - **Describe before you diagnose.** The morphology — macule, papule,
      plaque,
        vesicle, distribution, color, border — is the data. Name the lesion in the
        language of dermatology and the differential narrows itself.
      - **The dangerous diagnosis sets the threshold.** Most lesions are benign,
      but
        the cost of missing one melanoma is a life. The whole discipline of biopsy
        thresholds is built around that asymmetry.
      - **Pattern recognition is fast; the discipline is the lesion that breaks
      the
        pattern.** The "ugly duckling" mole that looks different from all the patient's
        others is more suspicious than any single ABCDE feature.
      - **Dermoscopy turns guessing into reading.** The naked eye sees a brown
      spot;
        the dermatoscope sees pigment networks, streaks, and blue-white veils that
        separate nevus from melanoma.
      - **A rash plus fever, mucosal involvement, or skin pain is an emergency
      until
        excluded.** SJS/TEN, DRESS, and necrotizing infection hide among benign
        eruptions and kill fast.
      - **Treat the disease over time, not the flare in the room.** Psoriasis
      and
        eczema are chronic; the plan is a long-term regimen, not a one-visit cream.
  - heading: Mental Models
    markdown: >-
      - **ABCDE and the ugly-duckling sign.** Asymmetry, Border irregularity,
      Color
        variegation, Diameter over 6 mm, and Evolution flag the suspicious mole; the
        ugly duckling — the lesion that doesn't match the patient's other moles —
        catches the melanomas that don't fit ABCDE. Used together, not as a checklist.
      - **The two-step dermoscopy algorithm.** First decide melanocytic or not;
      if
        melanocytic, apply pattern analysis (or a scoring method like the 7-point
        checklist) to separate benign from malignant. Structure replaces hunch.
      - **Reaction patterns.** Inflammatory skin disease sorts into a limited
      set of
        histologic and clinical patterns — spongiotic (eczema), psoriasiform,
        lichenoid, vesiculobullous, granulomatous. Recognize the pattern and the
        differential collapses to a handful.
      - **Distribution as diagnosis.** Where a rash is tells you what it is:
      extensor
        surfaces and scalp suggest psoriasis; flexural suggests atopic dermatitis;
        photodistributed points to a drug or lupus; dermatomal means zoster.
      - **The biopsy as the tiebreaker, chosen to fit the question.** Shave for
      raised
        lesions, punch for inflammatory rashes and full-thickness sampling, excisional
        for suspected melanoma so the depth (Breslow) can be measured intact.
      - **Clinicopathologic correlation.** The slide and the bedside are read
      together;
        a histology report that doesn't fit the clinical picture is a reason to call the
        pathologist, not to accept a wrong answer.
  - heading: First Principles
    markdown: >-
      - The skin has a finite vocabulary of responses; the same morphology
      recurs
        across very different causes.
      - A pigmented lesion's danger is mostly its depth, and depth is invisible
      from
        the surface — which is why suspicious lesions are excised whole, not shaved.
      - Most skin cancer is slow and curable if caught; melanoma is the
      exception that
        justifies the vigilance applied to all of it.
      - A rash that hurts more than it itches, or peels, is more worrying than
      one that
        merely itches.
      - You cannot diagnose what you don't undress to see; the lesion is on the
      part of
        the skin the patient didn't mention.
  - heading: Questions Experts Constantly Ask
    markdown: >-
      - Is this lesion changing, and is it the ugly duckling among this
      patient's
        others?
      - Does this need to come off and go to pathology today, or can I
      photograph and
        reassess in three months?
      - Which biopsy technique answers the question this lesion is asking?

      - Is this rash a benign eruption or the start of SJS/TEN, DRESS, or a
        necrotizing infection?
      - What is the distribution telling me, and have I examined the scalp,
      nails,
        mucosa, and soles?
      - Is this skin finding the disease, or a window onto a systemic illness or
      drug?
  - heading: Decision Frameworks
    markdown: >-
      - **Biopsy vs. monitor vs. reassure.** Biopsy any lesion with melanoma
      features
        or unexplained change; monitor borderline lesions with dermoscopic photography
        and short-interval recheck; reassure the clearly benign. The threshold drops
        with risk factors (fair skin, many nevi, personal or family history).
      - **Excisional vs. partial biopsy for pigmented lesions.** Suspected
      melanoma is
        excised with narrow margins to preserve Breslow depth and architecture; partial
        sampling can understage and mislead the surgeon and the patient.
      - **The drug-eruption danger triage.** Any drug rash gets checked for the
      red
        flags — mucosal lesions, skin pain, blistering, facial edema, fever,
        eosinophilia, organ involvement. Red flags stop the drug and escalate; their
        absence allows a measured approach.
      - **Topical vs. systemic vs. biologic in inflammatory disease.** Severity,
      body
        surface area, and quality-of-life impact ladder the patient from topicals to
        phototherapy to systemic agents to targeted biologics.
  - heading: Workflow
    markdown: >-
      1. **History, focused.** Onset, evolution, symptoms, prior treatments,
      drugs, sun
         and occupational exposure, family history of melanoma.
      2. **Full-skin examination.** Whole surface in good light, including
      scalp, nails,
         mucosa, palms, soles, and intertriginous areas; total-body photography for the
         high-risk mole patient.
      3. **Dermoscopy.** Magnify suspicious lesions; apply the two-step
      algorithm to
         sort melanocytic from non-melanocytic and benign from malignant.
      4. **Decide and sample.** Choose biopsy technique to fit the lesion and
      the
         question; mark and document.
      5. **Correlate.** Read the pathology against the clinical picture;
      reconcile any
         mismatch with the pathologist.
      6. **Treat and stage.** Excise with appropriate margins, refer for
      sentinel node
         when indicated, start the inflammatory regimen, and set the surveillance
         interval.
      7. **Surveil.** Schedule recurring skin checks; the second melanoma is
      common in
         the patient who had a first.
  - heading: Common Tradeoffs
    markdown: >-
      - **Sensitivity vs. over-biopsy.** Lowering the biopsy threshold catches
      more
        melanomas and scars more benign moles; the number-needed-to-biopsy is a real
        cost the dermatologist owns.
      - **Cosmesis vs. margin.** Wider excision and Mohs maximize clearance; the
      face
        demands tissue preservation, so the technique is matched to site and risk.
      - **Aggressive systemic therapy vs. its toxicity.** Biologics and
      immunosuppressants
        clear severe psoriasis and eczema but carry infection and malignancy risk.
      - **Treating the flare fast vs. steroid harm.** Potent topical steroids
      work but
        thin skin and rebound; the long game limits them.
      - **Reassurance vs. surveillance.** Telling the worried patient a mole is
      benign
        vs. photographing it for safety; both have costs in anxiety and follow-up.
  - heading: Rules of Thumb
    markdown: >-
      - The lesion the patient didn't point to is the one you must examine.

      - A changing mole is suspicious regardless of how benign it looks today.

      - If it doesn't fit a benign pattern and you're reaching to explain it
      away,
        biopsy it.
      - A rash that involves the mucous membranes is dangerous until proven
      otherwise.

      - Symmetric, well-demarcated, and stable is reassuring; asymmetric,
      ill-defined,
        and evolving is not.
      - When the clinical and the dermoscopic disagree, the more worrying one
      wins —
        biopsy.
      - Photograph the borderline lesion so the next visit has a baseline, not a
      memory.
  - heading: Failure Modes
    markdown: >-
      - **Missing the amelanotic or acral melanoma.** Anchoring on pigment and
      ABCDE
        misses the pink nodule and the melanoma on the sole or under a nail.
      - **Shaving a melanoma.** Transecting the lesion destroys the depth
      measurement
        the surgeon and the prognosis depend on.
      - **Treating a drug eruption as benign** when it was the prodrome of
      SJS/TEN or
        DRESS.
      - **Calling everything eczema.** Lumping unexplained chronic rashes into
      "eczema"
        and missing cutaneous lymphoma or a systemic disease.
      - **Steroid dependence.** Chasing flares with ever-stronger topicals
      instead of a
        disease-modifying plan.
      - **Diagnostic momentum on the referral label.** Accepting the referring
      "fungal
        rash" without scraping for KOH and re-examining.
  - heading: Anti-patterns
    markdown: >-
      - **Treating without describing** — prescribing a cream for a "rash" never
        characterized morphologically.
      - **The partial biopsy of a pigmented lesion** that understages a
      melanoma.

      - **Cryotherapy of an undiagnosed lesion** that destroys a cancer's
      histology.

      - **Polypharmacy of topicals** layered until the regimen itself causes
      irritation.

      - **Skipping the dermatoscope** on a pigmented lesion and biopsying or
      dismissing
        on naked-eye gestalt alone.
  - heading: Vocabulary
    markdown: >-
      - **Macule / papule / plaque / nodule** — flat, small raised, large
      raised, and
        deep raised lesions; the primary morphology.
      - **ABCDE** — the melanoma screening features: asymmetry, border, color,
      diameter,
        evolution.
      - **Dermoscopy** — surface microscopy revealing sub-surface pigment and
      vascular
        structures.
      - **Breslow thickness** — the depth of a melanoma in millimeters; the
      dominant
        prognostic factor.
      - **Mohs surgery** — staged excision with same-day margin mapping for
      high-risk
        skin cancer.
      - **Spongiosis / acanthosis / parakeratosis** — histologic patterns naming
        epidermal reactions.
      - **SJS / TEN / DRESS** — severe, sometimes fatal drug reactions of the
      skin.

      - **Nikolsky sign** — skin sloughing with lateral pressure, a marker of
      blistering
        disease.
  - heading: Tools
    markdown: >-
      - **The dermatoscope** — the defining instrument; magnification and
      polarized
        light that turn a brown spot into a readable structure.
      - **Total-body photography and mole-mapping** — baseline imaging for
      high-risk
        patients to detect change over time.
      - **The biopsy kit (shave, punch, excisional)** — the means of getting
      tissue to
        the pathologist.
      - **KOH prep and Wood's lamp** — bedside tests for fungus and
      pigment/fluorescence.

      - **Cryotherapy, electrosurgery, and lasers** — for destroying benign and
        pre-malignant lesions.
      - **The Mohs microsurgery setup** — for margin-controlled excision of
      facial and
        recurrent cancers.
  - heading: Collaboration
    markdown: >-
      Dermatology is tightly coupled to pathology — so tightly that many
      dermatologists

      read their own slides, and the dermatopathologist is the partner who
      confirms the

      diagnosis behind the diagnosis. Clinicopathologic correlation is a two-way

      conversation, not a one-way report. The dermatologist works with the
      plastic

      surgeon and head-and-neck surgeon for large reconstructions after cancer

      excision, the medical oncologist for advanced melanoma now treated with

      immunotherapy, the rheumatologist for the cutaneous signs of systemic
      autoimmune

      disease, and the primary care physician who refers the lesion and manages
      the

      patient's other illness. The recurring friction is the referral label: the

      discipline is to re-examine and re-describe rather than inherit a prior
      diagnosis.
  - heading: Ethics
    markdown: >-
      Dermatology straddles medical necessity and cosmetic demand, and the line
      is

      where the ethics live. The honest dermatologist biopsies what needs
      biopsying and

      declines to sell cosmetic procedures dressed up as medical ones. The
      asymmetry of

      melanoma justifies vigilance, but over-biopsy and overdiagnosis of
      indolent

      lesions cause real harm — scars, anxiety, and cost — and the patient
      deserves an

      honest account of the trade. Access matters: skin cancer is curable when
      caught

      early, and the patient who can't get a timely skin check is the one who
      presents

      with a thick melanoma. Diagnoses in skin of color are missed when the
      training

      images were all on light skin; the duty is to know the patterns across all

      patients. And reassurance must be honest — never falsely calm a changing
      lesion to

      end the visit faster.
  - heading: Scenarios
    markdown: >-
      **The "stable old mole" the patient mentions in passing.** A 50-year-old
      comes in

      for acne and offhandedly says a back mole has been there for years. On
      full-skin

      exam it's the ugly duckling — darker and more irregular than his dozen
      other

      nevi. Dermoscopy shows an atypical pigment network with focal blue-white
      veil.

      ABCDE is only borderline, but the ugly-duckling sign and the dermoscopic

      structures override the reassuring history. The expert performs an
      excisional

      biopsy with narrow margins — not a shave — preserving Breslow depth.
      Pathology:

      melanoma in situ. The discipline that caught it was examining the skin he
      didn't

      come in for and trusting structure over story.


      **The morbilliform rash on day 10 of an antibiotic.** A patient develops a

      widespread red rash a week and a half into amoxicillin. Most are benign
      drug

      eruptions. The expert checks the red flags: facial edema, fever to 38.8,
      tender

      skin, and a lab shows eosinophilia with a rising ALT. This is DRESS, not a
      simple

      exanthem. The decision is to stop the drug immediately, admit, monitor
      organ

      function, and start systemic steroids — treating it as the potentially
      fatal

      reaction it is rather than reassuring and continuing.


      **The chronic "eczema" that won't clear.** A 60-year-old has had an itchy,

      scaly, patchy eruption for two years, called eczema and treated with
      steroids

      that never quite work. The expert resists the inherited label, notes the
      patches

      are well-demarcated and somewhat atrophic in sun-protected sites, and
      biopsies

      rather than re-prescribing. Histology shows an atypical lymphocytic
      infiltrate:

      early mycosis fungoides (cutaneous T-cell lymphoma). Refusing to keep
      calling an

      unexplained chronic rash "eczema" changed the diagnosis and the patient's
      path.
  - heading: Related Occupations
    markdown: >-
      A dermatologist is a physician who specialized in skin, so internal
      medicine and

      the diagnostic discipline of the physician are the foundation. The
      pathologist —

      specifically the dermatopathologist — is the indispensable partner who
      confirms

      the tissue diagnosis, making clinicopathologic correlation a daily
      conversation.

      The medical oncologist now co-manages advanced melanoma with
      immunotherapy. The

      surgeon and plastic surgeon reconstruct large defects after cancer
      excision.

      Radiologic technologists and radiologists stage deeper or metastatic
      disease. The

      registered nurse runs the skin-cancer surveillance clinic and the biologic

      infusion program.
  - heading: References
    markdown: |-
      - *Fitzpatrick's Dermatology in General Medicine*
      - *Dermatology* — Bolognia, Schaffer & Cerroni
      - *Andrews' Diseases of the Skin*
      - *Dermoscopy: The Essentials* — Soyer, Argenziano, et al.
      - AAD Clinical Guidelines
