Dealing with BCC skin cancers

Warrigal

SF VIP
Australia is sometimes referred to as the skin cancer capital of the world.
For fair skinned people like me the sun is very unkind.

Too late now to regret that I hated to wear broad brimmed hats in my youth or the non existence of sun screen lotions, the damage was done years ago.

Yesterday I presented for surgery to remove two basal cell carcinomas. One was above my right eye just inside the hairline. It was fairly small and because it was on the scalp, only needed stitches to close the wound. The other was on the bridge of my nose quite close to my left eye. This needed more fancy plastic surgery involving creating a flap of skin to cover the gap after excision of the cancer. I have in the past had similar plastic surgery to remove a very early melanoma from my arm and a persistent lesion from my foot so I was not at all concerned about this procedure.

As some of you will know I began this month with cataract surgery on both eyes, one week apart. I was pleasantly surprised at how easy this was and how painless.

Unfortunately, seeing two different surgeons in short succession led to some confusion about preparation. I take daily aspirin as a blood thinner and was told I could keep taking it right up to the eye surgeries. I was probably told to stop taking it before the skin cancer surgery but forgot all about it.

The plastic surgeon went ahead anyway and the work was done yesterday. The cut in the scalp is tightly stitched and doesn't leak. It isn't even covered with a dressing. The one on the nose is covered with a porous dressing that is not waterproof. I am not allowed to get it wet for three days, after which it can come off.

Trouble is, because of the aspirin, it is leaking blood through the dressing and also into the tissues around my eye. I am going to have the grand daddy of all shiners before long. I am also wondering how I am going to peel off a dressing that is now encrusted with dried blood and plasma without lifting up the fragile skin underneath.

I'm due at my GP's office tomorrow to talk about vaccinations and get some new scripts so I'll enlist his help with the dressing.

I look a bit like a victim of domestic violence right now and I've posted a couple of photos on the grandkids Facebook group to demonstrate how important it is to take precautions when exposed to the harsh rays of the sun. Fortunately I am preaching to the choir for most of them.
The rest might need a more graphic warning.

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Glad you got those taken care of, Warri. And I hope your recovery goes smoothly! I think many of us were sun worshipers in our misguided youth and it's coming back to haunt us.
 
Well today was a bit weird.

I went to see the plastic surgeon today as a follow up from the procedures I had late last month to remove two BCC skin cancers.

I had two of them. One was above my right eye, just inside the hairline at the temple. It did not require any fancy stitching - just a clean cut and the skin pulled together and stitched in a straight line. Pathology showed that all of the cancer had been removed. It was a BCC.

The other one was high up on the bridge of my nose. My GP had zapped it last year and it was refusing to heal. It was scabby for months and when I saw him early this year is when he referred me to the skin surgeon. It was still scabby when I had my consultation and he made arrangements for me to have it removed and some fancy work using either a skin graft or a flap to cover the gap.

So, I spent the intervening time trying not to disturb the scab and it comes off, leaving a small depression in the nose. On operation day the surgeon went ahead as planned, removing the suspect area plus some to spare and creating a skin flap and a couple of blackish eyes.

The sample was sent to the lab and it came back negative. No cancer cells to be found. The surgeon was also surprised but I'm taking it as good news.

Sure, I will have some scars on my face but the good news is that I won't have a couple of nasty skin cancers spreading across my dial. Scars fade over time. Cancer cells don't.
 

I missed this first time around, I'm sorry you had to go through all of that in such a short space of time Warrigal... but Yeaaaaahhhh..what a relief for you to know that they found no cancer cells.... Excellent!!!!:)
 
So glad it wasn't malignant!

I posted somewhere on here about a cancerous growth that was removed from my lower eyelid, complete with most of the eyelid, but being cancer free is more important than appearance, so I'm just grateful, as you are, that the cancer is gone!
 

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