We found a match
Your institution may have rights to this item. Sign in to continue.
- Title
A method for distinguishing the intended margins for a melanoma from the tissue cones after surgical excision.
- Authors
Kriegel, David; Marmur, Ellen; Shan, Hui Yi; Mercer, Stephen E.; Birge, Miriam B.; Lee, Arnold
- Abstract
Background Surgical excision of severely dysplastic nevi and thin cutaneous melanomas (<1 mm in depth) remains the most effective treatment to date. However, sometimes a severely dysplastic nevus may be upstaged to a melanoma in situ, or a melanoma in situ may be upgraded to an invasive melanoma once the completely excised specimen is reviewed microscopically. This then requires a re-excision around the entire scar at follow-up as the dermatological surgeon can be perplexed as to where the precise locations of the pigmented lesion and the tissue cones are, thereby generating a longer scar. Objective We want to introduce a simple, cost-effective and easy-to-implement approach that permits the dermatological surgeon to distinguish from a linear scar the site of the original pigmented lesion and the lengths of the tissue cones. Therefore, if a re-excision is necessary, instead of surgical removal around the entire scar, only a focal directed excision of the pigmented lesion is necessary and this will result in a shorter scar; this will be useful for cosmetically sensitive areas on the face. A case is included to illustrate our objective. Results and Discussion Using our surgical method on a patient's left cheek pigmented lesion originally diagnosed as melanoma in situ with a subsequent revised diagnosis of invasive melanoma generated a shorter scar and a favorable cosmetic outcome.
- Subjects
MELANOMA; NEVUS; SURGEONS; SCARS; PRECANCEROUS conditions
- Publication
International Journal of Dermatology, 2011, Vol 50, Issue 12, p1560
- ISSN
0011-9059
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/j.1365-4632.2011.05048.x