Grey's Anatomy Star's Cancer Battle!

Feb 17, 2007
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Eric Dane was diagnosed with skin cancer just last month. After successfully having treated the disease, the actor is now opening op to OK! magazine about his struggle.
We're gonna try and not be a cynic for a moment. Hopefully Dane is speaking out to increase awareness and encourage people to get examined regularly. And, if is he did get paid for the interview, which he probably did, hopefully he's donating the money to some cancer charity!
The Grey's Anatomy star first detected something was wrong when he looked in the mirror and saw what looked like chapped lips but clearly wasn’t.
“I went to my dermatologist,” Dane tells OK!. “He said it was malignant tissue caused by sun damage."
The malignancy was treated by freezing the cancerous tissue off with liquid nitrogen. Unfortunately for Eric, the actor had a severe reaction to a cream given to him for his lip after the treatment . “My skin is very sensitive and my lip was traumatized by the procedure I had to go through.”
That doesn't sound very pleasant!
His lip’s overreaction to the medication created a painful scenario that made eating difficult, if not impossible. “I didn’t eat very well for a couple of weeks and lost a bunch of weight,” Eric explains, estimating that he dropped at least 10 pounds off his 6'1" frame while dealing with his cancer.
Thankfully, though, Dane is better now.
We need McSteamy around for a while!
 
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Contrary to a recent tabloid report, Eric Dane does not have skin cancer. OK! Magazine’s cover story, “My Fight Against Cancer,” claiming Grey’s Anatomy’s Dr. Steamy is battling cancer, is being blasted as a “misrepresentation.” Eric’s rep claims he did have malignant tissue removed, but he “does NOT have cancer.”

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How melodramatic

Every second person who comes to the medical centre I work in, has a lesion frozen off by Liquid Nitrogen. If there was any concern at all over malignacy the lesion would have been cut out, and sent off to a laboratory for analysis, and to make sure all of the tissue had been removed.

The only good thing that I can say about the interview is that it at least some attention has been bought to the skin cancer issue