19/01/2025
This was a 10 out of 10 surgical presentation. The patient was referred to me to have a routine āblood-wartā (haemangioma) removed. It was very similar to the one in the first picture but was not position on the dorsal (upper, outer) wrist ; but on the ventral (lower, inner) wrist. There was not a lot of suspicion regarding this lesion, as it had been there for about 10 years. But in hindsight, it had recently become irritated and instead of being red or purple, it was a deep purple (šøš„š¶) almost black. So pretty unexpectedly the histopathology from the shave biopsy and diathermy came back as a Clark level 3 malignant melanoma. So, the next step was a formal wide re-excision of this malignant melanoma.
But as shown in picture 2, the giant radial artery (where the nurse takes your pulse) was just below the biopsy wound and the wide re-excision would include the extremely important median nerve.
So this involved hair-raising blunt dissection, constantly feeling for the pulsation of the radial artery and very careful avoidance of the median nerve.
Eventually the job was done and the outcome was 100% perfect