What is Mohs Surgery?
Mohs surgery is a procedure used to remove skin cancers (most commonly basal and squamous cell carcinoma and melanoma) in a way that preserves a maximum amount of healthy tissue. It is useful for skin cancers when:
(1) the location of the cancer is near sensitive areas, like the fingers or face;
(2) earlier treatments have not worked;
(3) a skin cancer is large; and
(4) regular surgery is less likely to remove the cancer.
This procedure video illustrates the procedure on 2 patients with basal cell carcinoma. Click https://ja.ma/3b4scuY to learn more.
0:00 Disclaimer
0:07 Introduction
0:28 What this video will cover
0:43 Mohs "stage" steps
1:09 Marking surgical sites
1:27 Stage 1: skin layer resection (patient 1)
1:59 Maintaining skin layer orientation
2:55 Stage 1: processing layer onto slides (patient 1)
3:53 Stage 1: histology review for cancer (patient 1)
4:31 Discussion on wound closure
5:10 Wound closure (patient 1)
5:47 Stage 1: histology review for cancer (patient 2)
6:24 Stage 2: skin layer resection (patient 2)
6:38 Stage 2: histology review for cancer (patient 2)
6:56 Stage 3: skin layer resection (patient 2)
7:07 Stage 3: histology review for cancer (patient 2)
7:20 Wound closure (patient 2)
7:57 1-week follow-up before-and-after wound healing
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