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עמוד בית
Tue, 17.12.24

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December 2024
Joseph Alcalay MD FACMS

Almost three-quarters of a century ago an American surgeon named Frederick Edward Mohs, had the idea of excising skin cancers and examining the margins before the closure of the surgical wound. In this manner he thought the patient would get better treatment with the best cosmetic result.

Mohs micrographic surgery (MMS) in its present format has been used as a surgical method for treating skin cancers for the last 70 years. The method became popular with American dermatologists 54 years ago when the original Mohs technique was modified into its fresh tissue modality [2] and in the rest of the Western world and Israel more than 35 years ago. Variations of MMS started to appear and indications for surgery also expanded. At the beginning, MMS was indicated mainly for basal and squamous cell carcinomas–nonmelanoma skin cancers (NMSC). Knowledge has been collected and today the method is applicable for a variety of other skin cancers such as melanoma in situ, microcystic adnexal carcinoma, dermatofibrosarcoma protuberans (DFSP), and other adnexal and spindle cell tumors. In this issue of the Israel Medical Association Journal (IMAJ), Landov and colleagues [3] showed the value of MMS for the treatment of DFSP.

May 2011
G.M. Weisz

This medical history essay claims a medical fraud committed by the authorities, and used as a pretext for the November 1938 anti-Jewish Kristallnacht pogrom throughout the Third Reich. The suggested conspiracy covered up the real cause of death of the German Embassy's secretary in Paris. Baron Ernst vom Rath had been shot by a Jewish teenager who was frantic because of the plight of his family. A surgical analysis of the victim's injuries, and of the medical attention he received, suggests the likelihood of medical malpractice which led to his preventable demise.
 

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