Total body mapping
A structured record of the skin surface designed to support broader and better organized follow-up.

Advanced technology: FotoFinder ATBM Master
Advanced digital mapping
FotoFinder ATBM Master technology to monitor the skin with precision, detect changes over time, and support confident clinical decisions.
Technological advantage
This is not just a photograph. FotoFinder ATBM Master works as a structured documentation and comparative analysis system that helps track lesions more methodically, detect subtle changes and support stronger clinical decision-making over time.
A structured record of the skin surface designed to support broader and better organized follow-up.
Side-by-side comparison helps reveal variations that may be harder to perceive in an isolated review.
Sequential documentation provides more context and continuity for long-term clinical monitoring.
Digital magnification adds precision to the assessment of selected lesions within a complete evaluation.
Technological exclusivity
The value of a system like ATBM Master lies not only in its technical sophistication, but in how it is combined with dermatologic interpretation, clinical experience and personalized follow-up. It is an advanced resource that remains uncommon and especially valuable when used with method.
Clinical perspective
The system becomes truly valuable when advanced imaging is interpreted within a dermatologic consultation, not outside it.
How it works
The consultation defines the context, the indication and what truly needs monitoring.
The skin is documented through an organized and technically precise image capture process.
Images help review changes, patterns and points of attention with greater clarity.
The most appropriate monitoring interval is defined according to each clinical context.
Illustrative gallery
Illustrative examples of the kind of documentation used during follow-up. This block is prepared to be replaced by real images when available.
Indications
Medical value
Technology does not replace the dermatologist. Its real value emerges when combined with expert interpretation, clinical context and the ability to decide what deserves follow-up, what requires closer attention and what makes medical sense for each patient.
Frequently asked questions
No. It is a visual and photographic examination, with no pain and no invasive intervention.
It depends on the case and the extent of documentation, but it is usually part of a structured evaluation with enough time to record the skin properly.
Usually there is no complex preparation. If any specific guidance is needed, it will be explained before the appointment.
That depends on the risk profile, number of lesions and the reason for follow-up. The interval is defined individually.
No. It supports the consultation and clinical decision-making, but it does not replace dermatologic judgment.