Skin Cancer Teatment Detection in Miami and South
Miami Beach:
Mohs Micrographic Surgery for Basal Cell Carcinoma, Squamous Cell
Carcinoma and Melanoma by Board Certified Doctors of Dermatology.
More than 1.2 million people in the U.S. are diagnosed with skin cancer each year.

If left untreated, this disease can continue to progress. Fortunately, advanced treatment offering the highest potential for cure is available.
Treatments for skin cancer vary from common ones such as scraping and burning, freezing, radiation and routine excision offered by many physicians to Mohs surgery, an advanced surgical technique performed by highly trained specialists.
Mohs Micrographic Surgery
Mohs micrographic surgery is a state-of-the-art treatment for skin cancer. The physician serves as surgeon, pathologist and reconstructive surgeon. This treatment relies on the precision and accuracy of a microscope to trace and remove all of the skin cancer down to its roots.
When compared to other treatments for skin cancer, Mohs micrographic surgery offers the highest cure rate (over 90%), has the lowest chance of re-growth, minimizes the potential for scarring, and is the most exact and precise means of removing skin cancer.
Using a proven and universally acclaimed technique that gets to the root of the skin cancer, surgeons trained in Mohs surgery first remove the apparent cancer and then perform an immediate microscopic examination of the tumor and any underlying diseased tissue. This process allows the surgeon to see beyond the visible disease and precisely identify and remove all of the cancer -- down to the root.
If microscopic analysis still shows evidence of disease, the removal process continues layer-by-layer until the cancer is all gone.
This technique ensures that only the diseased tissue is removed, while preserving the healthy, normal tissue. Mohs surgeons are dermatologists with extensive knowledge and training in the field of skin and its healing properties.
They are also well trained in reconstructive surgery and can perform any necessary reconstructive procedure at the time of surgery. Mohs micrographic surgery is effective for most types of skin cancer.
Our dermatologists can advise you if Mohs surgery is appropriate for you. Generally, Mohs surgery is performed on an outpatient basis, under local anesthesia.
|
New Section skin cancer types prevention and
treatments: click here.
Short Term Mole Monitoring
Short term mole monitoring is an
additional diagnostic tool used for the early detection
of melanoma. It is typically used to monitor a single
suspicious growth that lacks definite dermatoscopic
features of melanoma.
The technique is most often used for changing moles that
appear benign with dermoscopy or in the case of certain
suspicious moles that have no history of clinical
change.
A high resolution digital dermatoscopic image is taken
and then photographed again after a 3 month interval.
Studies have verified that unchanged lesions are benign
and those that demonstrate change are likely malignant.
Ultimately, short term mole monitoring allows for the
detection of melanoma at its earliest stage and helps
avoid unnecessary excisions.
Dermoscopy/Epiluminescence Microscopy (ELM)
a.k.a. Skin Surface Microscopy
Dermscopy, also known as epiluminescence microscopy (ELM) or skin
surface microscopy, is a non-invasive technique utilizing a hand
held microscopic that allows magnified examination of suspicious
skin growths.
Dermoscopy helps to distinguish between benign and malignant skin
lesions and has been shown in several studies to increase the
diagnostic accuracy of melanoma. This tool allows us to detect
melanomas earlier and avoid unnecessary biopsies of benign lesions.

New Section Skin cancer types prevention and
treatments: click to see PowerPoint
|