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Full-Text Articles in Plastic Surgery
Titanium Hardware Extrusion Following Pediatric Cranioplasty, Cody L. Mullens, Luke J. Grome, Cesar A. Serrano, Rabia Qaiser, Aaron C. Mason
Titanium Hardware Extrusion Following Pediatric Cranioplasty, Cody L. Mullens, Luke J. Grome, Cesar A. Serrano, Rabia Qaiser, Aaron C. Mason
Faculty & Staff Scholarship
Aging pediatric cranioplasty patients with titanium implants are a population at risk for scalp breakdown and implant extrusion. Complications from titanium use in adult cranioplasty patients are well documented in the medical literature. Reports of complications focused on pediatric populations are sparse. In this case series, we report two examples of negative sequelae associated with titanium utilization in infant cranioplasty and discuss our treatment strategy for each case.
Mucinous Adenocarcinoma Of The Scalp: Primary Cutaneous Neoplasm Versus Underlying Metastatic Disease, Ciara A. Brown, Michael C. Lynch, Cristiane M. Ueno
Mucinous Adenocarcinoma Of The Scalp: Primary Cutaneous Neoplasm Versus Underlying Metastatic Disease, Ciara A. Brown, Michael C. Lynch, Cristiane M. Ueno
Faculty & Staff Scholarship
Primary cutaneous mucinous carcinoma (PCMC) is a rare mucin-pro- ducing malignancy derived from epithelial glandular structures. The literature re- garding this topic is mostly in the form of case reports and case series. PCMC tends to present in the elderly with predilection for the head and neck and on initial assessment it can be easily mistaken for a simple inclusion cyst. Although PCMC is often indolent in nature, in rare instances it can metastasize and should remain a differential diagnosis in a selected population. The significance in identifying PCMC is reliably differentiating it from metastatic mucinous adenocarcinoma. We present a …