WELCOME TO JURNAL REKONSTRUKSI DAN ESTETIK

 WELCOME TO  JURNAL REKONSTRUKSI DAN ESTETIK    Faculty of Medicine, Universitas Airlangga    ISSN International Center  |   p-ISSN:2301-793...

JURNAL REKONSTRUKSI DAN ESTETIK: VOL.3 NO.1 JUNE 2018

 MARJOLIN’S ULCER: MALIGNANT TRANSFORMATION FROM BURN SCAR


Unveiling the sinister transformation: Marjolin's ulcer emerges from burn scars with a vengeance! 🔥

Marjolin’s ulcer is a malignant lesion from a scar due to burn trauma, chronic osteomyelitis, chronic inflammation, or chronic fistulae. This type of ulcer is rare, usually progressively growing on unhealed wound, accompanied by chronic trauma especially burn scar. Marjolin’s ulcer can form different types of pathologies`. Squamous cell carcinoma is the most type of histology. Previously, there was 3 Marjolin’s ulcer reported in Indonesia.

Reporting 3 Marjolin’s ulcer case on Dr. Soetomo General Academic Hospital since 2008 to 2016. Two patients have history of unhealed chronic wound and one patient has history of burn injury 27 years ago. From the histopathology examination, all the results are squamous cell carcinoma. All patient undergo wide excision surgery done by surgical oncologist. All the defect is closed by flap modality. One patient’s defect is closed by latissimus dorsi flap, the other with anterolateral thigh free flap, and the latter is closed by latissimus dorsi free flap. Remain raw surface close by split thickness skin graft.

Marjolin’s ulcer is malignant lesion from scar due to burn trauma, chronic osteomyelitis, chronic inflammation, or chronic fistulae. Marjolin’s ulcer sometimes grow become squamous cell carcinoma although require a long time. Treatment this case is same the other malignancy. Diagnosis should be confirmed by clinical, radiological, and pathological. Staging can use the classification of UICC (Union for International Cancer Control) in accordance with the histopathological results.  

Surgery serves as the primary approach for achieving local control, and radiotherapy plays a supplementary role, which must be supported by vigilant oncological monitoring.

Our latest insights delve into the ominous journey from chronic scar tissue to squamous cell carcinoma. Discover how early diagnosis and adherence to standard malignant lesion protocols are paramount in combatting this formidable foe.

Join us as we navigate through the intricacies of staging based on UICC classification, utilizing histopathological findings to guide treatment strategies. Stay vigilant, stay informed!

Read More: https://doi.org/10.20473/jre.v3i1.24368
More Articles: https://e-journal.unair.ac.id/JRE/

#MarjolinsUlcer #SquamousCellCarcinoma #BurnScarComplications #MedicalResearch
#jreunair