The outcome of treatment in 40 black patients (27 women, 13 men; mean age 62.9 years) with plantar melanoma over a 13-year period was analysed to evaluate the efficacy of wide local excision with split skin grafting. Substantial delay in seeking medical attention occurred in 35 patients. At presentation, 20 patients had stage I disease, one stage II, 15 stage III and four stage IV. Acral lentiginous melanoma (27 patients) was the most common histological type. The mean Breslow depth was 6.9 mm and 35 patients had lesions of Clark level IV or V. The mean surface area or plantar lesions was 13.3 cm2. Wide local excision with split skin grafting was used in 29 patients; four patients with neglected advanced plantar lesions had below-knee amputation and seven with metastatic disease did not undergo surgery. Graft sepsis occurred in six patients and local recurrence in two. Nine patients were alive at follow-up; the 5-year survival rate was 25 per cent. Delay in presentation and locally advanced disease may explain the poor prognosis of plantar melanoma in black South Africans.
Endoscopic drainage provides a minimally invasive approach to pseudocyst management, with success and recurrence rates similar to those of open surgery but with lower morbidity and mortality rates. It should be considered the treatment of choice for pseudocysts less than 1 cm thick which bulge into the stomach or duodenum, or for those which communicate with the main pancreatic duct.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.