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Nothing deeper than our skin | Ricardo Ruiz | TEDxValladolid

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    When I chose to become a dermatologist,
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    it was a big disappointment
    for my parents.
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    My mother from Valladolid,
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    from Ureña,
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    told me,
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    "My son, with your CV
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    you should have chosen
    a medical specialty to save lives;
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    instead, you'll be looking
    at warts and lumps your whole life".
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    I'd like to show you three things:
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    First, my mother was mistaken,
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    and second,
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    dermatology is a great help
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    changing people's lives
    through the skin.
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    And third,
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    a doctor who only knows about medicine
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    doesn't know anything in fact.
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    Why did I choose dermatology?
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    When I was a medical student
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    at the hospital, we went
    to see a patient at the ICU.
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    The patient was in a bad state,
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    with injuries all over the body;
    the prognostic was bad.
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    and he had also ulcers on his legs.
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    The reason why
    a dermatologist was called.
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    The dermatologist explored
    the patient and said,
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    "The patient is allergic to one
    of the creams that you are using."
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    Two days later, the team at the hospital
    stopped the cream and he got better.
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    I though that was incredible.
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    A specialization, that within seconds,
    allows you to make a diagnosis,
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    to start a treatment
    and to help a patient.
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    Let see, for example, Ines.
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    Ines came to our practice
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    because she had a redness
    over their eyelids, and was very tired.
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    She was diagnosed with dermatomyositis,
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    a sort of illness associated
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    with some cancers.
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    It turned to be true;
    Inés had breast cancer.
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    She was treated and saved, because
    the cancer was in the early stages.
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    It was possible to help Ines,
    thanks to her skin.
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    Anther example, Beatriz,
    came with these spots.
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    These white spots are known as vitiligo.
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    Beatriz was diagnosed
    with an illness of thyroid,
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    sometimes associated with vitiligo.
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    Lucia: Lucia came to our practice because
    she had these coffee milk spots
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    and they were caused
    by a neurofibromatocis,
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    an illness associated with brain tumours.
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    Lucía had a little cerebral tumor,
    which was treated and cured.
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    Dermatologists, we can
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    diagnose many illnesses through skin.
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    But it is possible not only through
    the skin, but also through hair and nails.
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    Dermatology is the external face
    of the internal medicine.
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    In fact, dermatologists are
    the managers of the imperfections,
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    some of them medical,
    and some others aesthetics.
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    Skin cancer is one of worst imperfections.
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    Did you know that here,
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    four in ten people
    will be affected by skin cancer?
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    The statistics are harsh.
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    In the United States, every minute,
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    a melanoma case is diagnosed.
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    And every hour a patient dies
    due to a melanoma
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    because it is one
    of the most aggressive cancers.
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    Here is the case of Mateo
    who came to our practice
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    because of one melanoma on his back.
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    The melanoma was extirpated,
    but the injury was very deep
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    and the tumour has already spread
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    to the brain and other organs.
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    Later, came his brother,
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    who was very anxious about that,
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    and his own back
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    which was full of freckles.
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    One of them was a melanoma.
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    Which?
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    It is difficult to know at first glance;
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    this was the one.
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    Then, with a machine
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    known as a digital dermascope,
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    we can see the freckles inside.
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    And know which will be bad or not.
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    In other words, skin talks us.
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    What happens is that sometimes
    we need a higher technology
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    to understand its language.
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    This was the melanoma,
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    and in the case of melanomas
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    around 100% of the cases
    are cured if diagnosed on time.
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    Let's look at Julian.
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    He came due to light acne.
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    He had gone two years
    without leaving home.
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    He had no friends, no studies,
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    and he was deeply affected.
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    Acne affects 90% teens, and for them,
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    whose personality is not structured yet,
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    this illness affect them greatly.
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    In this case,
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    Julian was treated with a drug,
    and he was cured in 6 months.
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    His life changed thanks to his skin.
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    Or in the case of Jose Ignacio
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    who had a hemangioma.
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    An hemangioma is a dilated
    blood vessel problem.
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    Let's see with a drug
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    known as Propanolol,
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    a drug which was known to be useful
    for hemangiomas 3 years ago.
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    Let's see before and after.
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    It was possible to help him,
    and to change life of the whole family,
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    through the improvements
    with the modern dermatology
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    Maria came to our practice
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    because she looked like
    she was suffering from tonsillitis.
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    She started developing some illness
    on the back, legs, arms and hair.
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    Maria had psoriasis,
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    which affects 5% Spanish population.
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    Maria started changing
    her way of dressing,
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    going out less often,
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    and avoiding the swimming
    pool or the beach.
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    She even started to look for miraculous
    treatments on the internet.
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    Finally she came to our practice
    and received a treatment
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    known as "light therapy",
    which is just taking sun.
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    Only with sun, the psoriasis disappeared.
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    Now, Maria has a normal life
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    and the psoriasis is under control.
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    Before I carry on, I'd like to tell you
    something that happened this morning.
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    I was running because I had not been
    in Valladolid since I was a child,
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    so, I went running to river shore,
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    and I found a beautiful landscape.
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    You realize how, like the changing skin
    of the banks of the river,
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    you are also changing people's lives here.
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    People are practising paddle surf,
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    canoeing, volley, practising sports.
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    It's similar to Albania,
    capital of Tirana,
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    which was a grey,
    and sad city three years ago;
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    typical post-communism city,
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    with lots of delinquency
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    and the Mayor decided to paint
    all houses in brilliant colours.
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    A month later,
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    delinquency had fallen by a 90%.
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    So, if we change the skin of things
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    and that affects our behaviours,
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    changing our skin will affect us greatly.
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    I am going to tell you
    the story of Adriana.
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    Adriana came to our practice
    because as she said,
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    "Doctor, I do not recognise myself
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    when I am watching myself in the mirror.
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    What can I do?"
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    The battle against aging
    is a lost battle since we're born.
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    But it is also true
    that modern dermatology
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    has some techniques
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    that can help our patients
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    to become old with elegance
    and discretion.
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    We made a combination of treatments.
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    She sent me an email
    some months ago, telling me,
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    "My self-esteem is much better,
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    my relationships have improved,
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    and I have just been promoted at work."
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    And the most important,
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    "When watching myself in the mirror,
    how I look matches how I feel."
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    It means that aesthetic dermatology,
    as frivolous as it can sound,
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    can help people.
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    It is true that if we're only looking
    for an ideal of beauty, the final results
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    can be grotesque.
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    And when looking around us,
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    we can see very attractive people
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    who have asymmetric eyebrows,
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    big noses and prominent mouths;
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    their faces are imperfect,
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    however, they are very attractive.
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    It is known that a smile
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    is the best first impression,
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    rather than what clothing
    or surgery can do.
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    Even if the smile is squint.
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    As happens with the smile
    of my wife and my daughter Adriana.
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    Dermatologist has the duty
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    to tell people when less is more,
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    and that we have to live
    with our physical imperfections.
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    Picasso said,
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    "We have to look for beauty
    within imperfection."
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    We should not be obsessed
    with removing the wrinkles of life
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    but to put more life in our wrinkles.
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    Did you know that many of the techniques
    used in aesthetic dermatology
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    are also used in medical dermatology?
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    An example is facial paralysis;
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    There are many patients
    with facial paralysis,
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    and thanks to Botox, which relax muscles,
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    they can improve their condition,
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    and he quality of their lives.
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    Patients have more symmetrical faces.
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    Or in the case of María José
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    who came to our practice
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    because she was suffering
    from Hyperhidrosis.
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    Hyperdrosis is sweating
    too much, by armpits or hands.
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    She destroyed the keyboard
    on her computer,
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    her clothes, and she was very worried
    about her wedding day.
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    Finally, she was injected with Botox
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    and she could enjoy her happy wedding.
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    What will the future of dermatology be?
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    The future is fascinating.
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    New and personalised drugs
    are being developed,
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    according to patient's genetic code,
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    or a tumor's genetic code.
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    It is possible to make
    a diagnosis via distance
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    thanks to teledermatology.
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    We are collaborating
    with some African organizations
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    and they send us pictures to make
    a diagnosis, or start treatment.
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    Mother cells.
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    Did you know that the biggest store
    of mother cells is in our skin?
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    In the fat of the skin.
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    But now, I'd like to ponder,
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    because we are talking
    about advances, the Internet,
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    mother cells, high technology.
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    And we cannot forget
    something very important:
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    the patient.
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    Sometimes, doctors treat the illness
    very well, but not the patient.
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    When talking about health systems,
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    either public, or private,
    concerted, or all of them,
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    the best health system
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    should be based on the patient.
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    The real personalized medicine
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    is to be sitting down with the patient
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    listening to them, touching them
    and being involved in their problems.
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    I remember a boss who always told me,
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    "Every time a patient is coming
    with a very wide psoriasis
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    or some sort of skin illness,
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    you must sit down with the patient
    and touch them without gloves
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    to show them
    that you're not rejecting them.
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    Because in medicine,
    as in many other fields
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    there is much information
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    but little wisdom.
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    It's time to come back
    to the roots of medicine.
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    Which means,
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    what the Mayo brothers said
    when they set up the Mayo Clinic,
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    "Necessities of patients are the first".
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    As you can see, there is a fascinating
    relationship between skin and mind.
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    Many skin patients
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    suffer from depression
    or anxiety due to illness,
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    but it also can happen vice versa.
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    There are many changes,
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    for example, our skin gets red
    when we are nervous,
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    our hair falls out often
    when we are anxious,
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    or dermatitis is worsening.
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    Or psoriasis.
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    Did you know that brain cells
    and skin cells
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    came from the same embrionary cells?
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    This is something very important.
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    because our skin is not just
    a cover on our body, but an organ.
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    The biggest organ that we have.
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    It is an active organ
    in contact with all our being,
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    and it is an organ which speaks to us,
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    telling us what is happening inside
    physically and mentally.
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    One of the most difficult talks
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    was a few months ago, when I had to talk
    at my four-year old daughter's school.
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    The talk was about being a doctor,
    and being a dermatologist.
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    I started by asking them a question,
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    "What is most cool about being a doctor?"
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    A boy quickly got up and said,
    "You can see people naked"
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    (Laughter)
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    And then a girl said,
    "You can help lots of people."
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    And it's true, the best thing
    about being a doctor
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    is that you can help lots of people
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    because although a cure
    is not always possible,
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    at least we can mitigate pain
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    and as Nietzche said,
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    "The doctor who cannot understand a soul
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    wil never understand a body."
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    So, two messages
    for everybody to take home
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    from today's talk:
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    First,
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    We can change people's lives
    throughh their skin
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    and second,
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    the doctor who only knows about medicine
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    doesn't know anything.
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    I would like to finish with this case:
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    my mother.
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    Here she is with my
    six month old daughter.
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    It was 4 years ago.
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    She was diagnosed with lung cancer,
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    and breast cancer, a year later.
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    So she has received during this time
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    chemotherapy, radiotherapy, etc.
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    You might not believe it,
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    but the biggest concern
    for my mother was losing her hair;
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    a secondary effect of the treatment.
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    It can sound frivolous
    but around 90% cancer patients
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    are very worried about
    losing hair and eyebrows.
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    Modern dermatology
    can help these patients a lot;
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    controlling the secondary effects
    from chemo and radio,
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    over hair, skin and nails.
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    So, I would like to finish
    saying that finally my mother
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    is not bothered anymore by the fact
    that her son became a dermatologist,
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    because she has learned
    that there is nothing deeper,
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    than our own skin.
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    Thanks.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Nothing deeper than our skin | Ricardo Ruiz | TEDxValladolid
Description:

The skin, the largest organ in our body, is often telling us a deeper story what is happening and who we are, physically and emotionally. Ricardo offers a new vision of this medical specialty, and how dermatology is capable of changing lives.

This talk was given at a local TEDx event, produced independently of the TED Conferences.

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Video Language:
Spanish
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDxTalks
Duration:
13:35

English subtitles

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