Skin Biopsy
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What is the
test?
Doctors take biopsies of areas that look abnormal
and use them to detect cancer, precancerous cells,
infections, and other conditions. For some biopsies,
the doctor inserts a needle into the skin and
draws out a sample; in other cases, tissue is
removed during a surgical procedure.
For this test, abnormal areas of skin are removed
to test for cancer or other skin diseases.
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How
do I prepare for the test?
Tell your doctor if you have ever had an allergic
reaction to the medicine lidocaine or similar
types of local anesthesia.
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What
happens when the test is performed?
This procedure is done in a doctor's office,
often by a dermatologist. The doctor begins by
injecting a local anesthetic near the biopsy
site. Although the injection usually stings for
a second, the rest of the procedure is painless.
Depending on the size of the lesion, one of two
methods will be used to remove or sample it.
For small lesions and tissue samples, your doctor
might do a punch biopsy, in which he or she places
an instrument shaped like a straw with a sharp
end against your skin and twists it. The sharp
end works like a cookie cutter to slice a small
circle from the top layer of skin. The doctor
lifts the tissue away with tweezers. A single
stitch closes the opening in the skin.
Larger lesions and tissue samples are removed
with an excisional biopsy. In this case, the
doctor uses a blade to cut an oval opening around
the area. The doctor will stop any bleeding with
a cauterizer, a wand-shaped instrument that uses
an electric current to seal the ends of bleeding
blood vessels. You'll also need stitches to close
the incision.
With both types of biopsies, the skin sample
is then given to a pathologist and examined under
a high-powered microscope.You'll probably be
able to go home right afterward.
For skin biopsies that are being tested for
melanoma, the most serious form of skin cancer,
your doctor will try to remove the entire area
that looks abnormal. That way, the biopsy will
not only determine if the lesion is malignant,
it might also cure the cancer. The sample will
be examined under a microscope to make sure the
whole cancer has been removed. You might need
additional skin surgery if the examination shows
that the cancer extended to the margins of the
skin sample.
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What
risks are there from the test?
If you had an excisional biopsy, you'll have
a scar shaped like a straight line. Scars are
rare following a punch biopsy. There may be some
minimal bleeding, and in rare cases a minor infection
will develop in the skin around the biopsy. Following
any kind of incision into the skin, some people
develop keloids-reddish lumps on the healing
skin.
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Must
I do anything special after the test is over?
Keep the healing wound clean and dry.
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How
long is it before the result of the test is
known?
It can take several days to get your results.
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