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New Love Island bombshell Lola’s terrifying health scare just days before entering the villa as she issues warning

LOVE Island bombshell Lola Deluca suffered a terrifying health scare just days before entering the villa.

Lola, 22, stormed the Love Island villa last night with fellow bombshell Harry Baker.

New Love Island bombshell Lola’s terrifying health scare just days before entering the villa as she issues fans with warning, https://www.tiktok.com/@loladelucaa/video/7375976132010609952
Lola revealed a health scare just days before entering the villa
TikTok
Editorial Use Only. No Merchandising. No Commercial Use. Mandatory Credit: Photo by ITV/REX/Shutterstock (14588905ap) Lola Deluca. Love Island' TV Show, Series 11, Episode 44, Mallorca, Spain - 16 Jul 2024
She became one of the latest bombshells last night
Shutterstock
Editorial Use Only. No Merchandising. No Commercial Use. Mandatory Credit: Photo by ITV/REX/Shutterstock (14588905ar) Lola Deluca, Joey Essex. Love Island' TV Show, Series 11, Episode 44, Mallorca, Spain - 16 Jul 2024
Lola confessed to having her eye on Joey Essex
Shutterstock

But before become one of the newest Islanders Lola took to TikTok to give her followers an update after having a mole removed.

She said: “I thought I would just give you guys my last update on my mole situation.

“I had a phone call on Friday, for them to give me my results, and they basically said it was one stage away from being melanoma, which is skin cancer.

“The woman said, ‘you were very lucky that you got it checked when you did’. I just had a gut feeling, You know your body and you know when something isn’t right.

“I’ve now to go back and have more removed, just to make sure that it’s all fully out – all the tissue. She said one that’s done it’s a 99 percent chance it’s gone and won’t come back so it’s a bit scary really.”

Issuing a warning to her followers, Lola said: “I’m not going to use a sunbed now ever again, it’s going to have to be fake tan from now on.

“Your health comes first before anything and they’re so dangerous.”

Ahead of her arrival in the Love Island villa, Lola revealed she’s got her eye on Joey Essex.

She said: “Joey is my type to a tee so it will be interesting to see if there is anything between us.”

She added: “Joey’s head could turn and I’m going to try and be the one to do it so let’s see what happens.”

The Sun also told how Lola had been messaging Joey before he entered the villa, and became the third bombshell to have a connection to him following Grace Jackson and Emma Milton.

What is melanoma, what are the symptoms and how can you prevent it?

Melanoma is the most serious type of skin cancer that has a tendency to spread around the body.

It is diagnosed 16,000 times per year, and tragically takes the lives of 2,340 people per year.

The number of people being diagnosed with melanoma is increasing, and it is the 5th most common cancer in the UK.

But it is also one of the most preventable cancers, with 86 per cent of cases in the UK avoidable.

The best way to protect yourself from melanoma is to be sun safe – wear SPF every day, wear a hat and sunglasses and keep out of the sun in the hottest hours. It is also advised to avoid sunbeds. 

People who are fair-skinned, have blue or green eyes, blonde or red hair and a large number of freckles or moles are more likely to get skin cancer.

Surgery is the main treatment for melanoma, particularly if it is found early. This will involve removing the affected tissue in the skin. 

Radiotherapy, medicines and chemotherapy are also sometimes used to try and stop the cancer from growing. Treatment depends on the severity of the disease. 

What are the symptoms?

The key thing to look out for are changes to an existing mole, or a new mole on your skin.

Most experts recommend using the simple “ABCDE” rule to look for symptoms of melanoma skin cancer, which can appear anywhere on the body.

There are five letters/words to remember:

  1. Asymmetrical – melanomas usually have two very different halves and are an irregular shape
  2. Border – melanomas usually have a notched or ragged border
  3. Colours – melanomas will usually be a mix of two or more colours
  4. Diameter – most melanomas are usually larger than 6mm in diameter
  5. Enlargement or elevation – a mole that changes size over time is more likely to be a melanoma

A mole that changes size, shape or colour may be a melanoma.

But other signs to look out for include moles that are:

  • Swollen and sore
  • Bleeding
  • Itchy
  • Crusty

How deadly is it?

Melanoma is a deadly form of skin cancer. 

The outlook of a person’s disease depends on the stage of the cancer when it was diagnosed. 

Survival is better for women than it is for men. 

“We don’t know exactly why this is. It may be because women are more likely to see a doctor about their melanoma at an earlier stage,” says Cancer Research UK.

The charity says that generally, statistics show that in England, more than 85 out of every 100 people (more than 85 per cent) will survive their melanoma for 10 years or more after they are diagnosed.

  • Around 100 per cent in England diagnosed with melanoma at stage 1 – when the cancer cells are only in the top layer of skin – will survive for five years or more after diagnosis.This drops to 80 per cent for stage 2.
  • Some 70 per cent live for a further five years when they are diagnosed in stage 3, which is when the cancer has started to spread to nearby lymph nodes.
  • At stage 4, when the melanoma has spread elsewhere in the body, almost 30 per cent survive their cancer for 5 years or more.

Cancer Research says the stage 4 data does not account for age differences. Age can affect outlook and younger people have a better prognosis than older people.

Age can affect outlook and younger people have a better prognosis than older people.

What is melanoma?

Melanocytes are cells in the skin that give us the colour of our skin because they produce a pigment, known as melanin.

When you sit in the sun, melanocytes produce more pigment (a sun tan), which spreads to other skin cells to protect them from the sun’s rays.

But melanocytes are also where cancer starts.

Too much UV causes sunburn, and this is a sign of damage to the skin’s DNA.

The UV triggers changes in the melanocytes, which makes the genetic material become faulty and cause abnormal cell growth.

People who burn easily are more at risk of skin cancer because their cells do not produce as much pigment to protect their skin.

Those with albinism are at the most risk because their skin produces no pigment at all.

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