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  • Post
    casagrayson
    Participant

    I know that no one can diagnose a lesion on the internet.  I know the only way to determine if it is a serious problem is to have a biopsy.  However, I'm going to ask anyway.  My husband has had multiple primaries, none of which required SNL.  About a month ago, he had a nodule pop up.  It has continued to grow, and appears ulcerated.  

    How common would it be for a person to have had superficial spreading melanomas but then have an amenolotic nodular melanoma?  Or does a sub-q ever present in this manner?  Maybe I'm being too paranoid, and this is nothing but a benign lesion or a squamous.  My husband has an appointment with the dermatologist at the end of February and doesn't want to reschedule for earlier due to a hectic travel schedule.  Based on the appearance of this thing, should I insist he get to the doctor sooner than later?

    http://s102.photobucket.com/user/casagrayson/media/IMG_2717.jpg.html

Viewing 8 reply threads
  • Replies
      _Paul_
      Participant

      Susan, that link took me to a page for a free gift card.

        casagrayson
        Participant

        LOL.  I'm not handing out free gift cards for responses.  I'm not sure why it did that; it seems to work for me even if I log out of photobucket.  Sorry.

        casagrayson
        Participant

        LOL.  I'm not handing out free gift cards for responses.  I'm not sure why it did that; it seems to work for me even if I log out of photobucket.  Sorry.

        casagrayson
        Participant

        LOL.  I'm not handing out free gift cards for responses.  I'm not sure why it did that; it seems to work for me even if I log out of photobucket.  Sorry.

      _Paul_
      Participant

      Susan, that link took me to a page for a free gift card.

      _Paul_
      Participant

      Susan, that link took me to a page for a free gift card.

      JustMeInCA
      Participant

      Hi, Susan —

      My dad was diagnosed with both a superficial spreading melanoma on his shoulder and a amelanotic nodular melanoma on his leg. Your photo does look suspicious (no gift card for me!), though it could be anything. I'd push him to be seen sooner rather than later. 

      Elaine

        casagrayson
        Participant

        It looks very suspicious to me, too.  Do you know if a sub-q could have this look?

        JustMeInCA
        Participant

        Honestly, I don't know since my dad had no sub-qs  beyond the tumor on his leg. I'm wondering, though, if it could be a basal cell. 

        JustMeInCA
        Participant

        Honestly, I don't know since my dad had no sub-qs  beyond the tumor on his leg. I'm wondering, though, if it could be a basal cell. 

        JustMeInCA
        Participant

        Honestly, I don't know since my dad had no sub-qs  beyond the tumor on his leg. I'm wondering, though, if it could be a basal cell. 

        cancersnewnormal
        Participant

        I can't speak for all subQ's… but I've had three… and they all looked like someone had slipped a pea or a kidney bean (depending upon size) under the skin. They had no distinctive marks, color, or notable surface structure. I had one near my right breast that actually showed up on a mammogram, having the docs initially think I had breast cancer….. until I made them aware of my stage IV melanoma status. The other two were on my left forearm and the left side of my back, just below the shoulder blade. Looked just like a lump under the skin…. a slowly growing lump.

        cancersnewnormal
        Participant

        I can't speak for all subQ's… but I've had three… and they all looked like someone had slipped a pea or a kidney bean (depending upon size) under the skin. They had no distinctive marks, color, or notable surface structure. I had one near my right breast that actually showed up on a mammogram, having the docs initially think I had breast cancer….. until I made them aware of my stage IV melanoma status. The other two were on my left forearm and the left side of my back, just below the shoulder blade. Looked just like a lump under the skin…. a slowly growing lump.

        cancersnewnormal
        Participant

        I can't speak for all subQ's… but I've had three… and they all looked like someone had slipped a pea or a kidney bean (depending upon size) under the skin. They had no distinctive marks, color, or notable surface structure. I had one near my right breast that actually showed up on a mammogram, having the docs initially think I had breast cancer….. until I made them aware of my stage IV melanoma status. The other two were on my left forearm and the left side of my back, just below the shoulder blade. Looked just like a lump under the skin…. a slowly growing lump.

        casagrayson
        Participant

        It looks very suspicious to me, too.  Do you know if a sub-q could have this look?

        casagrayson
        Participant

        It looks very suspicious to me, too.  Do you know if a sub-q could have this look?

      JustMeInCA
      Participant

      Hi, Susan —

      My dad was diagnosed with both a superficial spreading melanoma on his shoulder and a amelanotic nodular melanoma on his leg. Your photo does look suspicious (no gift card for me!), though it could be anything. I'd push him to be seen sooner rather than later. 

      Elaine

      JustMeInCA
      Participant

      Hi, Susan —

      My dad was diagnosed with both a superficial spreading melanoma on his shoulder and a amelanotic nodular melanoma on his leg. Your photo does look suspicious (no gift card for me!), though it could be anything. I'd push him to be seen sooner rather than later. 

      Elaine

      KMick
      Participant

      My melanoma was an amelonotic nodular type.  It appeared from an existing flat, round, tan to pink mole that grew up and out.  The biggest thing was it changed; it became tender, continued to get extremely scaley / ugly and would bleed if I messed with it.  Don't know if this helps.

      I too was the gift card winner, lol.

      Karen

      KMick
      Participant

      My melanoma was an amelonotic nodular type.  It appeared from an existing flat, round, tan to pink mole that grew up and out.  The biggest thing was it changed; it became tender, continued to get extremely scaley / ugly and would bleed if I messed with it.  Don't know if this helps.

      I too was the gift card winner, lol.

      Karen

      KMick
      Participant

      My melanoma was an amelonotic nodular type.  It appeared from an existing flat, round, tan to pink mole that grew up and out.  The biggest thing was it changed; it became tender, continued to get extremely scaley / ugly and would bleed if I messed with it.  Don't know if this helps.

      I too was the gift card winner, lol.

      Karen

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