Skin tags are common thing happens in skin growths that resemble a small, soft balloon suspended on a skin. Skin tags are safe growths that can differ in number from one to hundreds. Males and females are equally liable to developing skin tags. Although some skin tags may decline spontaneously, most remain once formed. The medical name for skin tag is acrochordon. Some people call them "skin tabs."
Early on, skin tags may be as tiny as a flattened pinhead-sized bump.
A Mole also spelled mol, in chemistry. Moles occur when cells in the skin grow in a cluster instead of being spread throughout the skin. These cells are called melanocytes, and they make the pigment that accords skin natural color. Moles may darken after stripping to the sun, all along the teen years, and during pregnancy. The mole is the iniquitous unit of amount of integer in the International System of Units (SI).
A wart is a small growth with a rough texture that can appear anywhere on the body. It looks similar to a solid blister or a small cauliflower. Warts are induced by viruses in the human papillomavirus (HPV) family. Plantar warts affect the feet. But common warts are indeed an infection in the top layer of skin, caused by viruses in the human papillomavirus, or HPV, family. When the virus invades this outer layer of skin, usually through a tiny scratch, it causes rapid growth of cells on the outer layer of skin – creating the wart. THIS CAN BE TREATED AT THE EARLY STAGE.