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BCC Removal *thread contains graphic images*

(60 Posts)
MamGu12 Tue 18-Apr-23 08:46:11

Had one removed yesterday off my chin looking very swollen and bruised this morning didn’t expect it to look so gruesome, cant eat and only drink through a straw told to rest for 48hrs so is this to be expected thanks for help on this .

karmalady Tue 25-Jul-23 13:48:44

I have made the appointment, august 7th for a private consultation. It seems that response times vary greatly via GP and nhs, depends where you live. My gp practice reviews are very poor and I am sure bcc would be pushed to the back of the queue. Hence me using savings. The strikes are not helping confidence and now a gp strike is also on the horizon

PamelaJ1 Tue 25-Jul-23 08:28:39

Daddima
They use a camera. It looks like an iPhone, it may be an iPhone but has an attachment.
I think the one they used in my GP’s must have been an inferior model. The image was sent on line to a central imaging centre. The nurse couldn’t make a diagnosis.
The one in the hospital was obviously superior. The nurse showed me the image and even I could see that there was an ‘odd’ area.

karmalady Mon 24-Jul-23 21:59:10

2006 I had the tiny white seed pearl on my forehead removed and last year developed scaly skin on my nose. Deep down I knew it was a bcc starting but that head in sand syndrome stopped me looking too closely

Then I looked in a magnifying mirror, yes in no doubt, it is one, the smooth one this time. Not noticed by others but I know and my head is now out of the sand. I will be making that phone call tomorrow. This is what my savings are for and I have found a top surgeon.

Daddima Sat 22-Jul-23 15:39:30

Nana3

Been waiting for months now to have diagnostic treatment on my nose. Saw a nurse who said she could see cancer cells, months later saw a consultant. Then had an automated phone call asking me mostly if my life was affected by the sores on my nose and if I still wanted to be on the list. It makes me feel like no-one cares. Sorry, just venting really.
Best wishes to op.

Can I ask how the nurse was able to see the cancer cells? Is it something anyone concerned about skin lesions can have done?

fancythat Sat 22-Jul-23 08:36:10

I hope it clears up too LadyGracie
I wouldnt want your post lost on here, as you were the one who restarted the thread recently.

Hope everyone else on here is doing ok.

fancythat Sat 22-Jul-23 08:30:09

Because of this thread, I have looked up what a private appointment would cost in our area.
For a full body check up of moles and skin, £165.

If needed simple removal, around or up to about £800? for up to 3 removals? Something like that.
But I would assume and hope that NHS would act with some speed if removal needed?
I dont know. I am hearing of increasing problems with health care in our area.

fancythat Sat 22-Jul-23 08:27:20

Thank you PamelaJ1. Good idea.

PamelaJ1 Sat 22-Jul-23 08:18:55

That’s a new one to me LafyGracie hope it clears up.

fancythat take photos. That didn’t help me much but you have some evidence of what is happening. At first there isn’t much to see but they do change and it gives a time line.

fancythat Sat 22-Jul-23 08:17:00

Perhaps the way they do it in Australia is the answer?

I have a friend who did have a problem.
I have been blase already.
I dont know what to do for the best.

In "olden" days, in all 3 cases, you could have gone to the gp about something, and they spotted something.
Only 1 of the 3 people I know sees a doctor face to face sometimes, nowadays.

fancythat Sat 22-Jul-23 08:13:57

This thread concerns me in general.

Plus. I have a spot think on my face. had one removed about 5 years ago[just in case i was told. turned out not to be a problem when examined].
But how is anyone supposed to know. Even GPs dont from what I can gather.

I have two family members with that could or may not be something. Who knows?

What is the general public supposed to do?
Especially in these. state of the health service, times?

NotSpaghetti Sat 22-Jul-23 08:02:17

I will now continue to live my life depending on my wit and fantastic personality instead of relying on my amazing beauty!!!

Let's all do this!
flowers

LadyGracie Fri 21-Jul-23 18:00:37

I've had 5 BCC'S removed from my nose, ear and shoulder.
I went to see the Dr today about a red patch on my calf. He said I have Bowens disease, Squamous cell skin Carcinoma, a new one on me, he's given me cream for a month, taken lots of pictures. Appointment to go back in 4 weeks.
Anyone heard of or suffered from this?

PamelaJ1 Thu 29-Jun-23 12:46:00

hollysteers
It didn’t do the job for me after my biopsy but it can be very effective. Two of my sisters used it on a couple of theirs and it cleared the area.
I think that once you have a diagnosis then you will keep an eye on it and note any resurgence.
Unfortunately BCCs are a lot more common than they used to be but as we age we get all sorts of lumps and bumps. When I go to visit my daughter in Australia I usually pop in for a check up. It’s quite cheap there and they are very used to dealing with sun damage of all types.

blossom14 Thu 29-Jun-23 12:41:38

DH has had quite a few BCC treated over the last 15 years. Two treatments in September 2022 at our Oral Maxiofilliary dept as one was in the corner of his only functioning eye, the other on his cheek. I had to deal with all the dressings on his eye socket which I found terrifying.
We went for check up in December and all was well except for very swollen cheek area. The lovely surgeon told me to massage every day with E45 cream. After 4 months it all settled down.
I think we were very fortunate as we were referred within 2 weeks of seeing our GP.

Shinamae Thu 29-Jun-23 11:26:09

PamelaJ1

Shinamae
Scaly skin doesn’t sound to me to fit the bill but I’m not a dermatologist. Quite a few start with a small spot. The first one that I had I hadn’t noticed till it started bleeding. Others on this thread probably noticed similar spots. If mine had been treated when I first went to the Dr. It would have been a tiny , easy removal. My experience of getting to the operating table was very long and arduous.
The consultant doing the op was the one that failed to recognise it 3 years earlier. I’d gone privately as my GP also dismissed it.
If it worries you then get it checked.

I Will, thank you. And thank you for sharing your very traumatic experience. I am sure it will help a lot of people 💐

NanaDana Thu 29-Jun-23 11:03:25

One Melanoma (the nasty one) removed from my right forearm 2 years ago, plus a BCC from my back, and another BCC from my left forearm. Also had a Sentinel Lymph Node removed from my right armpit, but all was clear. Scars on forearms involved skin flaps, so were quite startling at first. Still just visible as faint lines 2 years later, but I was bored with my haute couture modelling career anyway.

hollysteers Thu 29-Jun-23 10:30:14

My daughter was diagnosed with a BCC at the top of her shoulder and I’m rather surprised that she has only been given cream to deal with it and she keeps it covered. Initially I thought this was a good sign that it wasn’t very serious, but reading these comments makes me think again. I expected it to be removed. I told her to keep on top of it and not let things slide at her next appointment.

Has anyone else just been prescribed cream?

MamGu12 Thu 29-Jun-23 09:55:52

Hello PamelaJ1 and everyone else my BCC is healing quite well looking not unlike your Pamela mine is on my chin so quite visible it is still swollen and the scar fading as long as the swelling goes down I will cope with the scar and eventually use concealer but for now it’s Cerave cream with SP in it .

Marydoll that is a very sobering post to which we should all take notice of when hoping those spots that don’t heal will go away, my consultant told me the same thing when I questioned the need for such a tiny spot to be removed .

Marydoll Thu 29-Jun-23 09:22:22

My mother ignored a BCC, and refused treatment, as nurse she knew exactly what it was.

It eventually ate away a large part of her forehead and encroached in the eye area. By the time we had medical power of attorney, it was too late and it was mentioned on her death certificate.
Never ignore them, I asked for a sore to be checked last week, due to her history.

Franbern Thu 29-Jun-23 08:30:40

The first two BSC that I had removed presented in the 'usual' way- ie: spots that did not clear up. First one on the side of my nose, close to the eye, required plastic surgery when removed.

However, the third time was no spot, but just a very small patch of light coloured skin on my forehead. When I first went to GP with this I saw a newly qualified doctor who dismissed me out of hand. I made him check with his mentor at the surgery who agreed that due to my history this required checking out by a dematologist.

Even she was perplexed, but took a small (two stitches), biopsy. When I went to the hospital for the result I was expecting to be sent away, but they said it was positive and required taking away then and there. It turned out this was the worst of those I had, going downwards instead of outwards, and I left nearly an hour later with eight stitches in my forehead.

When I had these stitches eventually removed I asked what would happen if I ignored these in the future. Nurse told me that they are ulcers, so I would end up with a large hole.

Have since gone some ten years with no re-ocurrance, now this tiny white spot right on tip of my nose. I have appointment to go to Dermatology in a couple of weeks time. They have this marvellous special camera which takes a photo instead of having to do a biopsy and can tell from that everything they used to learn from biopsy.

PamelaJ1 Thu 29-Jun-23 07:15:04

Shinamae
Scaly skin doesn’t sound to me to fit the bill but I’m not a dermatologist. Quite a few start with a small spot. The first one that I had I hadn’t noticed till it started bleeding. Others on this thread probably noticed similar spots. If mine had been treated when I first went to the Dr. It would have been a tiny , easy removal. My experience of getting to the operating table was very long and arduous.
The consultant doing the op was the one that failed to recognise it 3 years earlier. I’d gone privately as my GP also dismissed it.
If it worries you then get it checked.

Shinamae Wed 28-Jun-23 22:33:31

I have a couple of spots on my face that have been there months and just won’t disappear. I wonder if I should get them checked out?
thinking one was a normal spot I have tried to squeeze it but nothing comes out. It’s just a small hard spot to the right of my nose about an inch away…
But I do think a couple of them are just age things. I also have on my chest. A patch of quite scaly skin been there months as well, but I did show my doctor and he said it was nothing to worry about… reading this, I think I better go and get it checked out again

PamelaJ1 Wed 28-Jun-23 22:03:29

Wyllow
It seems to be getting darker but hopefully I’m being pessimistic. When it’s settled down a bit more I will start experimenting with make up but, at the moment, it’s only factor 50 all the way and a hat and keeping my back to the sun when possible.

Wyllow3 Wed 28-Jun-23 21:15:48

PamelaJ1 thats amazing recovery from before - will the skin continue to fade or concealer?

Wyllow3 Wed 28-Jun-23 21:14:17

Ladyleftfieldlover

I had a BCC removed from the side of my nose three or four years ago. I have been left with an inch long scar.

Snap, 2016, except on cheekbone on left side.
Just normal good quality face moisturiser. Just a thin white line now (and one side of my face slightly face-lifted but he did it so brilliantly few can tell.

8 weeks ago, upper arm, wound looking lumpy bit uneven, I'm using bio oil.