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Hordeolum (stye) |
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Chalazion |
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Parasytic Infections |
Benign Cysts |
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Epidermoid cysts |
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Epidermal Inclusion Cyst |
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Dermoid Cyst |
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Sweat Ductal Cysts |
Vascular Lesions |
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Capillary hemangioma |
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Cavernous hemangioma |
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Lymphangioma |
Benign Epithelial Lesions |
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Squamous papilloma
- Nevous and verrucous
- Actinic Keratosis
- Verruca vulgaris
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Seborrheic keratososis |
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Inverted follicular keratosis |
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Keratocanthoma |
Pre-malignant Lesions |
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Actinic Keratosis |
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Leukoplakia |
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xeroderma pigmentosum |
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radiation dermatosis |
Viral Lesions |
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Molluscum Contagiosum |
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Verruca Vulgaris |
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Herpes Simplex & Zoster |
Other Eyelid Lesions |
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Xanthelasma |
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Nevi
- functional
- compound
- intradermal
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Sweat gland tumors
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The surgeon may remove the tumor and have a pathologist check the tissue margins ("frozen section") to be sure the tumor is completely removed. Alternatively, a dermatologic surgeon may excise the tumor in a special way ("Mohs technique") to ensure total removal.
Once the tumor has been completely removed, reconstructive surgery is usually necessary. Reconstructive surgery is performed to make a new eyelid or repair the defect.
Needless to say, the goal is to reconstruct the eyelid so that it functions properly, protects the eye, preserves vision, and has a satisfactory cosmetic appearance. The patient must keep in mind that any form of therapy for eyelid skin cancer will leave a scar. However, an effort is always made to minimize scarring and obtain optimal cosmetic results.
After surgery, the healing process may take six months to one year. Once the wound has healed, follow-up with your physician is necessary to be sure that the skin cancer does not recur. Should there be development of a new cancer, it can then be detected early and treated promptly.
- Actinic Keratosis A scaly growth due to the sun; it is a precancer that may become a squamous-cell skin cancer (carcinoma).
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