Use of High-Frequency, High-Resolution Ultrasound Before Mohs Surgery
Autor: | Giselle Singer, Eric Z. Berkowitz, Brian S. Fuchs, Jane Y. Yoo, Ellen S. Marmur |
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Rok vydání: | 2010 |
Předmět: |
Male
medicine.medical_specialty Skin Neoplasms medicine.medical_treatment High resolution Dermatology Cohort Studies Predictive Value of Tests Mohs surgery medicine Humans Neoplasm Staging Ultrasonography business.industry Ultrasound Reproducibility of Results High resolution ultrasound General Medicine Mohs Surgery Surgery Carcinoma Basal Cell Carcinoma Squamous Cell Ultrasound imaging Female Neoplasm staging Radiology business |
Zdroj: | Dermatologic Surgery. 36:841-847 |
ISSN: | 1076-0512 |
DOI: | 10.1111/j.1524-4725.2010.01558.x |
Popis: | Although ultrasound imaging is employed ubiquitously today, its use to examine and assess the skin is a relatively new technology. We explored the clinical application and use of high-frequency, high-resolution ultrasound in Mohs micrographic surgery.To evaluate the ability of ultrasound to accurately determine lesion length and width of tumor borders in order to reduce the number of surgical stages.This was an institutional review board-approved single-center study of 26 Mohs surgery patients. Ultrasound images were taken to record lesion dimensions, and then the investigator documented clinical estimation of the first stage. Extirpation of the tumor and histological analysis were performed thereafter.The results of 20 patients were included in the analysis. A paired-samples t-test revealed no significant difference between clinical and ultrasound widths (t=-1.324, p=.20). Similarly, there was no significant difference between the lengths found from clinical assessment and ultrasound (t=-1.093, p=.29). For different tumor types, there was no significant difference between clinical and ultrasound widths or lengths for basal cell carcinoma (t=-1.307, p=.23; t=-1.389, p=.20) or squamous cell cancer (t=-0.342, p=.73; t=0.427, p=.68). CONCLUSION There is a diagnostic role for high-resolution ultrasound in Mohs surgery regarding the delineation of surgical margins, but its limitations preclude its practical adoption at this time. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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