An unusual coloured or raised area on the skin which someone has from birth..
Discoloration or other blemish present at birth.
An area of discolored skin that is present from birth or appears during the first few weeks of life. Vascular (relating to blood vessels) birthmarks are common and usually benign (not cancerous). They are composed of blood vessels bunched together in the skin. They can be brown, pink, tan, blue, or red, and they can be flat or raised. The most common types are capillary and cavernous hemangioma and PORT-WINE stain, both of which are reddish purple birthmarks caused by an abnormal distribution or malformation of blood vessels.
A skin blemish or mark present at birth. The cause is unknown but most birthmarks grow before the baby is born.
Birth marks are of various kinds; the most common are port-wine marks. Pigment spots are found, very often raised above the skin surface and more or less hairy, being then called moles.
A birthmark refers to an area of discolored skin that is either present at birth or appears shortly thereafter. There are various types of birthmarks, including moles, freckles, and melanocytic nevi, which manifest as flat, brown to blue-grey patches on the skin. Strawberry marks, characterized by bright red and often raised areas, and port-wine stains, which are purple-red and typically flat, are examples of birthmarks known as hemangiomas, caused by malformations of blood vessels. Strawberry marks commonly enlarge during the first year of life but tend to disappear by the age of nine. Port-wine stains, on the other hand, generally persist, although some can be diminished through laser treatment during adulthood.
A congenital condition characterized by an abundance of tiny blood vessels in a specific area of the skin. Most of these birthmarks fade away by the time a child reaches 18 months old, and the rest usually don’t require medical intervention before the age of five. The myth that they result from the mother experiencing fear during pregnancy is completely unfounded.