| Literature DB >> 22547959 |
Paul James Donald, James Boggan, D Gregory Farwell, Danny J Enepekides.
Abstract
Skin cancer involving the scalp is a common malignancy in the "sun belt areas of the United States." Most early lesions are well managed by primary care physicians and dermatologists. Occasionally we encounter basal cell, squamous cell, and rarely Merkel cell carcinomas that have failed local therapy and present with large tumors invading full thickness scalp, calvarium, and even underlying dura. We describe our experience with 52 such tumors and illustrate their resections and reconstruction. For full thickness lesions we generally do a wide field resection of skin and underlying calvarium followed by dural resection. Reconstruction is usually with dural replacement, calvarial reconstruction with titanium mesh, and cutaneous reconstruction with a musculocutaneous free flap or muscular free flap with an overlying skin graft. Complications, survival rates, and recurrence rates will be presented.Entities:
Keywords: Skull base; dural invasion; free flap; otolaryngology; scalp carcinoma; skin cancer; surgery
Year: 2011 PMID: 22547959 PMCID: PMC3312126 DOI: 10.1055/s-0031-1284216
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Skull Base ISSN: 1531-5010