The incidence and diagnosis of cutaneous malignancies are steadily rising. In addition, with the aging population and increasing use of organ transplant and immunosuppressive medications, subsets of patients are now more susceptible to skin cancer. Mohs micrographic surgery (MMS) has become the standard of care for the treatment of high-risk nonmelanoma skin cancers and is increasingly used to treat melanoma. Mohs micrographic surgery has the highest cure rates, spares the maximal amount of normal tissue, and is cost-effective for the treatment of cutaneous malignancies. As in other medical fields, appropriate use criteria were developed for MMS and have become an evolving guideline for determining which patients and tumors are appropriate for referral to MMS. Patients with cutaneous malignancies often require multidisciplinary care. With the changing landscape of medicine and the rapidly increasing incidence of skin cancer, primary care providers and specialists who do not commonly manage cutaneous malignancies will need to have an understanding of MMS and its role in patient care. This review better familiarizes the medical community with the practice of MMS, its utilization and capabilities, differences from wide excision and vertical section pathology, and cost-effectiveness, and it guides practitioners in the process of appropriately evaluating and determining when patients with skin cancer might be appropriate candidates for MMS.
Mid-dermal elastolysis is a well-defined clinical and histopathologic entity manifested by fine wrinkling of the skin and a mid-dermal loss of elastic fibers. Ultrastructural and histologic studies were performed in an attempt to better define the cause of the elastolytic process. Biopsy specimens from the lesions of 3 patients with mid-dermal elastolysis were studied at light and electron microscopic levels. Ultrastructural evidence of normal elastic fiber engulfment by activated macrophages was observed; however, some fields also demonstrated envelopment of abnormally degenerated elastic tissue. Although there are many potential causes of this degeneration, photodistribution of the lesions suggests that ultraviolet damage is a primary inciting factor.
This article provides an overview of the resurfacing technique of dermabrasion. Preoperative consultation, perioperative medications, postoperative management, common complications, and reasonable outcome expectations are all described in detail. A description of proper technique, intraoperative equipment, and an approach to full-face procedures is also described.
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