Gordon the Gopher
Active member
I had a BCC removed a few years ago at Brighton General. Remember they kind of scraped it off but also remember being told it was cancer and although not serious that word is so powerful you do brick it.
That first bit is my questionIt really depends which type it is… BCC, SCC, malignant melanoma, T-cell, etc…
The treatment is dependant on which one, the first three would be treated locally, anything more complex will go to a tertiary centre in London.
I have had one, which was just removed……
I have been previously treated for Basel cell carcinoma and it’s back. Awaiting treatment. Please don’t despair as they have been very good with their care for me. Shitty news on the job, I hope you get fixed up soon.So been a pretty shitty week at WS Towers. Lost my job on Tuesday but then to cap it, Mrs WS comes back from the doctor with suspected skin cancer diagnosed. The real kicker is of course I no longer have access to my, now ex-employer's, private medical services.
Anyway, despite the doctor's assurances, Mrs WS is shitting it as most of us would having heard the big 'C' word. Currently waiting for an appointment with a consultant.
Does anyone have any experience of having skin cancer ? What's the process ? What's the treatment like ?
There are a couple of responses on this thread ( particularly One Teddy May bank and Lammie Robertson ) that are well worth reading again. Not for your wife to read but for you.So been a pretty shitty week at WS Towers. Lost my job on Tuesday but then to cap it, Mrs WS comes back from the doctor with suspected skin cancer diagnosed. The real kicker is of course I no longer have access to my, now ex-employer's, private medical services.
Anyway, despite the doctor's assurances, Mrs WS is shitting it as most of us would having heard the big 'C' word. Currently waiting for an appointment with a consultant.
Does anyone have any experience of having skin cancer ? What's the process ? What's the treatment like ?
Thank you handsome man ! Work in IT management - mainly networks and cloud.Fingers crossed that it’s all very straightforward for Mrs WS. And good luck with the job hunt - what industry do you work in?
Fats x
*bald and flabby
Probably a basal cell carcinoma ..slow growing and they don’t spread thought the body …I went to MOHS last August for my latest ..first class treatment..mind you I laughed at the suggested 2 weeks off ..ain’t going to happenA lot depends on the type. I had one removed a few years back and it really was no big deal. It wasn't melanoma which is the one that can get really out of hand if not caught early, but I don't remember exactly what they called it. I'd gone to the dermatologist for some something completely unrelated and he took a look at something on my temple and didn't like the look of it. It was biopsied and he came back to me a little later to say it was cancer and would need to be removed.
I had Mohs surgery and it wasn't bad at all. They divide up the lesion, cut it out then take it away to exam it. If the margins aren't clean, they come back and flay you some more until they are satisfied. I think they only took one, or maybe two goes to decided they got it. Then a little more trimming so they could close it up and I was done. Hardly and scar left. You really have to squint to see it. I've been having regular six month check ups ever since where they routinely mumble about something being "precancerous" and then freeze it off with liquid nitrogen. All good fun.
I was talking to a nurse at a different doctor a few month back and she said she'd had Mohs for a lesion on her eyelid which I'm sure was a lot more unpleasant than my experience.
Anyway, best wishes to you and your wife and I hope hers is one of the easy ones too.
I noticed an irritable mole type thing on my back in the bath on Friday night which I can't see and this thread was somewhat serendipitous. It took me less time to get a GP appointment than a motorbike MOT this morning which surprised me as I thought the NHS had fallen apart. Maybe receptionists are good at filtering things that need a timely intervention. I did think that a Spire/Nuffield/BUPA GP at aroung £90 would be worth paying but perhaps not. Good luck and I hope it's nothing.I've actually woken up today noticing something in a very hard to reach/see place on my thigh. I had very bad sun burn as a kid so it was always a possibility. Trying to get to see someone now.
Hopefully it’s ok - I had a suspicious mole - got it checked by the dermatologist at the same time she was checking my SCC - that one turned out to be harmlessI noticed an irritable mole type thing on my back in the bath on Friday night which I can't see and this thread was somewhat serendipitous. It took me less time to get a GP appointment than a motorbike MOT this morning which surprised me as I thought the NHS had fallen apart. Maybe receptionists are good at filtering things that need a timely intervention. I did think that a Spire/Nuffield/BUPA GP at aroung £90 would be worth paying but perhaps not. Good luck and I hope it's nothing.
So sorry to hear this. I hope the responses on this thread have helped with what to do. Stay strong.So been a pretty shitty week at WS Towers. Lost my job on Tuesday but then to cap it, Mrs WS comes back from the doctor with suspected skin cancer diagnosed. The real kicker is of course I no longer have access to my, now ex-employer's, private medical services.
Anyway, despite the doctor's assurances, Mrs WS is shitting it as most of us would having heard the big 'C' word. Currently waiting for an appointment with a consultant.
Does anyone have any experience of having skin cancer ? What's the process ? What's the treatment like ?
Probably a basal cell carcinoma ..slow growing and they don’t spread thought the body …I went to MOHS last August for my latest ..first class treatment..mind you I laughed at the suggested 2 weeks off ..ain’t going to happen
It’s true, so many of my Aussie friends regularly have them removed.A lot of people here suffer, mostly for not putting protection on skin when playing out as kids.
Regularly see them at the bar with plasters on, or wearing dressings where growths have been removed.