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Surgical Notes

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    • Superficial lesions
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Home | Surgical Notes | Clinical | Superficial lesions

Lump & ulcers

Approach

  • Description of Lump
  • Spot diagnosis
  • Should The Children Ever Find Lumps Readily
  1. S - size / site / shape / surface / skin / symmetry / scars
  2. T - temperature / tenderness / transilluminability
  3. C - Colour / Consistency / Compressibility
  4. E - edge / expansibility / pulsatility
  5. F - fluctuation / fluid thrill / fixation
  6. L - lymph nodes / lumps elsewhere
  7. R - resonance / relations
  • Ulcer: BEDD
  1. B - base
    • Presence of granulation tissue
    • Slough
    • Evidence of malignant change
  2. E - edge
    • Sloping: a healing ulcer (venous or traumatic)
    • Punched out: ischaemic or neuropathic
    • Undermined: pressure necrosis or TB
    • Rolled: basal cell carcinoma
    • Everted: squamous cell carcinoma
  3. D - description of structure at base
    • Fascia
    • Muscle
    • Bone
  4. D - discharge
    • Serous (clear)
    • Sanguinous (blood)
    • Serosanguinous
    • Purulent (infected)

Inspection

  1. Site
    • Measured with respect to a fixed landmark (other bony prominence)
  2. Size
    • Measure size in centimetres
  3. Shape
  4. Skin
  5. Symmetry
  6. Scars
  7. Colour

Palpation

  1. Surface
    • Smooth/irregular
  2. Edge
    • Well/poorly defined
  3. Consistency
    • Soft - flesh of nostrils
    • Firm - nasal septum
    • Hard - bridge of nose
  4. Temperature
    • Using the dorsal surface of the hand
  5. Tenderness
  6. Transilluminability
    • Pen torch on either side of lump
    • Look through "opaque" tube (like a smarties tube)
  7. Pulsatility
    • Place fingers both sides of lump
    • Expansile / pulsatile
  8. Compressibility / reducibility
    • Compressible: lump disappears on release (AV malformations)
    • Reducible: lump disappears on pressure but reappears when another oppising force is applied
  9. Fluctuations
    • Place fingers on opposite sides of lump
    • Repeat at right angles
  10. Fluid thrill
  11. Fixation
    • Determine which plane lump is in and which structures it is attached to
    • Skin: moves skin over lump
    • Muscle

Percussion

  1. Dull
  2. Resonant (indicates air)

 

Auscultation

  1. Bruits
  2. Bowel sounds

Additional

  1. Examine draining lymph nodes
  2. Neurovascular status of area/limb
  3. Look for other lumps
  4. General examination (as necessary)

Comparison of different types of leg ulcers

 

  Venous Ischaemic Neuropathic
Appearance
Site Gaiter region  Tips of toes / pressure areas Heel. underneath metatarsal heads (pressure bearing areas)
Shape Variable, irregular Regular outline Regular outline
Size Can be very large Varying size Several cm
Edge Sloping, pale purple/brown Punched out, clean Clean
Base Pink granulation tissue Bone may be exposed, no granulation tissue Often exposed bone
Surrounding skin Chronic venous signs; lipodermatosclerosis Grey/blue Normal
Skin temperature May be warmer Cold Normal
Pulses Present Absent Present 

 

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