Before you read this, I need to give a warning that there are graphic pictures at the end of the blog. In early October 2019, I had a spot (that looked like a mosquito bite) come up on my right arm. I didn't pay any attention to it until about two weeks later when I realized that it hadn't gone away, and it had gotten bigger. So I looked at it more closely. This was no bug bite. It was red and white with brown spots - and looked like a small paw print. My regular doctor check up was scheduled for a couple of days later, so I asked him about it then. He thought it was sun damage and referred me to a dermatologist for a whole-body check because I have so many keratosis spots. Image 1 below is the spot on my right arm taken on November 2. Image 1 I started taking pictures because the earliest appointment I could get with a dermatologist was the Tuesday before Thanksgiving. In the meantime, I decided to make a skin serum and apply it to whatever this was. If my serum helped, I wanted to be able to show the doctor what it looked like before I got in to see her. Long story short, this lesion turned out to be a Lichenoid keratosis. Because my serum helped, there wasn't much for the doctor to see - my pics allowed her to make a clear diagnosis without biopsy. Image 2 shows what this one looks like now. Image 2 That was the good news. During the whole-body check, the doctor did find two other spots of concern - one was a small, hard bump on the back of my leg and the other was a red area on my upper left arm. In the 90s, that patch of skin on my arm had turned pure white - no freckles or pigment at all. In the last two to three years, it turned pinkish-red and a little scaly. The doctor took a biopsy from each spot and told me that, because of the holiday, it might take up to two weeks before the results came back. When she called the following Monday, I knew it was a bad sign. The spot on my leg was fine. The spot on my upper left arm was melanoma -- the more dangerous kind of skin cancer. Melanoma is not something to try and cure with food, herbs, or essential oils. It needs a surgeon. (Part of my "Hierarchy of Treatment" philosophy.) Image 3 shows the melanoma after the biopsy. The scab in the middle is from the biopsy. The red skin surrounding the scab is the cancer. There is still a white (no pigment) area around the outside edge of the melanoma. Image 3 I am extremely fortunate that this was very slow growing and only Stage 1 because cutting it out is a 100% cure. Surgery was December 16, and I am considered cured. Had this progressed to stage 2 or higher, much more treatment would have been required, and the chances of cure would have been lower. With melanoma, there is a special type of surgery called "Moh's Procedure". The surgeon removes the lesion and sends it for immediate biopsy. The incision is bandaged and the patient waits for results. If there isn't enough margin of clear skin, (biopsy results will specify the edge that isn't clear) the bandage is removed and the surgeon excises more from the indicated area(s). This is repeated until the proper margin of normal skin cells is achieved. Once it is attained, the surgeon has to cut more skin out to be able to close and stitch the incision. (A round or oval excision can't just be stitched together - darts have to be cut at opposite sides to allow it to be closed and stitched.) Image 4 below shows the open incision before the darts were cut (the purple marker indicates the darts (triangle shapes) he cut right after the picture was taken), and Image 5 shows the final stitching. Image 4 Image 5 The open incision may look gross to some, but it's also interesting, and pertinent to visualize why oils absorb into our skin so well. The white, wormy-looking tissue is a layer of fat -- part of the hypodermis. We also have lipid (fat) cells in our skin. Oils and butters are also fats, and fats attract fats. You may ask "Why didn't you get this spot checked sooner?" My answer is simple -- I never knew that a patch of pink/red skin was a warning sign. I knew that a mole that changed shape or got darker needed to be checked. I knew that something that looks like a big wart with blood vessels in it needed to be checked. I knew that something that has irregular edges and is multicolor needed to be checked. Even now, when I google 'melanoma images', I find pictures of a lot of things - none of which are a patch of red skin that looks like what I had on my arm. And this is why I'm sharing my experience and my pictures with you. If you, or someone you know, develop an area of unusual pink or red skin, go get it checked. Melanoma is a skin cancer that can spread to the lymph system and to internal organs. It can be deadly. My journey with melanoma was short -- just a few weeks from diagnosis to cure. Follow-up will take longer. I'll have skin checks every three months for two years, then every six months for two or three years, then annually for the rest of my life. I will also need to take a few precautions like keeping my skin covered when I'm out in the sun. Because of this experience, I've made some new goals for this website for 2020: I'll research the various types of skin cancer and keratosis lesions in depth and share what I learn through my blogs. I'll also experiment with all natural skin serums and butters to support my skin health and to try to minimize development and appearance of my keratosis spots. Update: This is a picture of the scar 28 days post op. The red area with the small scabs is where the large area was excised and the skin is still stretching. I've been using a salve I made with carrier oils only plus a lotion with carrier oils and CBD added. The scar is still puckered, but healing nicely. In an effort to help the part of my skin that is still stretching, I apply the salve and the lotion to a wide area of my arm. |
Archives
February 2021
CategoriesAuthorKaren Dragoo |