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EPITHELIOMAS OF THE FACE AND THEIR TREATMENT WITH RADIUM

HOWARD MORROW, M.D.; LAURENCE TAUSSIG, M.D.
Arch Derm Syphilol. 1922;5(1):73-87. doi:10.1001/archderm.1922.02350260076008.
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ABSTRACT

Chronic lesions of the face are of great importance to dermatologists on account of their frequency and because the patient expects not only a cure, but a good cosmetic result. In patients past the fourth decade, epitheliomas make up a large percentage of these chronic lesions. The two great classes of skin cancer occurring on the face are the basalcell epitheliomas and the squamous-cell epitheliomas. The first is by far the most common. It fortunately can usually be diagnosed at a glance and is the most readily cured. The squamous-cell type often presents more difficulty in diagnosis and the prognosis should always be guarded, because it is this type in which there is a tendency to lymphatic involvement.

CLINICAL FACTS REGARDING EPITHELIOMAS  It is not our purpose to enter into a discussion of the etiology of epithelioma, but a few clinical facts may not be amiss. In the first place,

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