BREAKING NEWS:

  • letter
  • print
  • follow
Adele   Ferguson
Adele Ferguson - Central Kitsap Reporter

Adele Ferguson appears Fridays in the CK Reporter.

Spot anything? Skin anomalies should be checked out early | Adele Ferguson

By ADELE FERGUSON
Central Kitsap Reporter Writer

Jun 07 2008

LIKE IT IS

Years ago, I forget how many, but at least 20, someone gave me a picture they took of me and I was surprised to notice a brown spot about the size of a quarter on my cheek.

It’s not that I hadn’t ever noticed it before, but if it was becoming significant enough to catch the eye in a photograph, I figured I should look into it. I delved into the American Medical Association’s Family Medical Guide, where I learned I was sporting what’s called a pre-cancerous skin spot caused by over exposure to the sun many years ago.

I.e., if you don’t do something about it, it will continue to grow and develop into one of three types of skin cancer: basal cell carcinoma, which grows very slowly and does not spread to other parts of the body until it has been present a long time; squamous carcinoma, which can metastasize but is completely curable; and malignant melanoma, which often metastasizes throughout the body and can be life threatening.

The latter is what Sen. John McCain has had four times. My onetime editor, Gene Gisley, had melanoma on his nose that required fairly frequent surgeries.

These spots can appear as scaly lesions (my brown spot), in warts and moles in little lumps that appear and don’t go away. I’ve had three on the left side of my neck, all squamous, none bigger than a match head, and all gone, each by a different treatment.

The reason I am telling you all this is that when you’re finished reading this, I want you to look in a mirror, especially if you are of Celtic origin as I am, with very fair skin. The disorder is very rare in dark-skinned people. Look at your face and neck and on your arms and have someone look at your back for some mole or sore acting up and not going away.

The son of a friend of mine learned he had melanoma when his girlfriend, a nurse, noticed what looked like it on his back and sent him to a doctor. That’s been a dozen years ago so even melanoma is curable when caught early, also the case with McCain.

Every six months I see a dermatologist and have any pre-cancerous spots that have appeared frozen off with a shot of liquid nitrogen. There also is a skin cream called fluorouracil or Efudex-40, which you can rub on a suspect spot daily for two or three weeks and will kill the cancer cells. The final resort is surgery.

The first spot my doctor scraped off for a biopsy removed all the cancer cells in the scraping and never returned. A new one, however, appeared later, which we treated with the skin cream. It too vanished. The third one he elected to cut out surgically last April and the biopsy report said there were no cancer cells in the surrounding tissue.

Another method we tried was rubbing the skin cream into my face nightly for a couple of weeks, goal being to kill any cancer cells under the skin before they developed sores. That cost $161 and I looked monstrous for about a month, bright red spots developing all over my face. Those were prospective pre-cancerous skin spots.

It didn’t work, however, because I still had spots after that. The treatment took a long time to heal, especially the skin under my nose which was bright for a long time.

OK, now go look in the mirror. Skin cancer sneaks up on you and it doesn’t matter who you are or how closely you are being monitored. Example: In one of the newspapers May 24 was this item:

“Britain’s Prince Charles had a small non-cancerous growth removed from his face, a spokesman at his official residence said Friday. Charles had the growth removed from the side of his nose late Thursday afternoon, shortly after that he met with the Dalai Lama at Clarence House in London.”

Look at your family and friends. Tell them if you see anything suspicious.

Adele Ferguson can be reached at P.O. Box 69, Hansville, WA 98340.

  • letter
  • print
  • follow
COMMENTING RULES: We encourage an open exchange of ideas in the PNWLocalNews.com community, but we ask you to follow our guidelines for respecting community standards. In a nutshell, don't say anything you wouldn't want your mother to read. So keep your comments:
  • Civil
  • Smart
  • On-topic
  • Free from profanity

We ask that all participants own their words by registering for an account. It's a simple process that will take seconds and helps keep our comments free of trolls, cranks, and drive-by commenters.

As a community site, we ask that the community help by using the "Flag" button on each comment if they feel the comment has violated the rules. You can also use the up and down arrows on each comment to voice your opinion about that particular comment.

Want to tell us something but you don't want it to be public? Talk to us privately.

Most Read Stories

Most read in Kitsap County

  • Bainbridge house is one of a kind
    BAINBRIDGE ISLAND REVIEW
    Jan 02 2009, 8:10 AM · UPDATED
  • Let’s not target goose laying golden eggs
    PORT ORCHARD INDEPENDENT
    Jan 03 2009, 12:00 AM
  • Bainbridge Public Works Director Randy Witt resigns
    BAINBRIDGE ISLAND REVIEW
    Jan 06 2009, 2:28 PM · UPDATED
  • Island Snapshots | Storm Chasers-Bainbridge
    BAINBRIDGE ISLAND REVIEW
    Jan 02 2009, 8:11 AM · UPDATED
  • Bainbridge Police Blotter | FYI, Jan. 3
    BAINBRIDGE ISLAND REVIEW
    Jan 03 2009, 5:00 PM
  • Fire guts Port Madison home
    BAINBRIDGE ISLAND REVIEW
    Today, 2:27 PM · UPDATED
  • Two dead following collision on Brownsville Highway
    NORTH KITSAP HERALD
    Dec 31 2008, 9:32 AM · UPDATED
  • The Year In Review 2008
    BAINBRIDGE ISLAND REVIEW
    Jan 05 2009, 10:03 AM · UPDATED
  • Suquamish man airlifted following jump from Agate Pass bridge
    BAINBRIDGE ISLAND REVIEW
    Today, 3:17 PM · UPDATED
  • Bainbridge Islanders take a polar plunge | Slideshow
    BAINBRIDGE ISLAND REVIEW
    Jan 05 2009, 11:44 AM · UPDATED

Most read in Washington

  • Bainbridge house is one of a kind
    BAINBRIDGE ISLAND REVIEW
    Jan 02 2009, 8:10 AM · UPDATED
  • Log jam closes Williams Avenue Bridge over Cedar in Renton; reopening uncertain
    RENTON REPORTER
    Today, 6:23 PM · UPDATED
  • Evacuation urged as flood waters rise
    SNOQUALMIE VALLEY RECORD
    Jan 07 2009, 8:14 PM · UPDATED
  • Navy confirms P-8A squadrons
    WHIDBEY NEWS TIMES
    Jan 02 2009, 2:23 PM · UPDATED
  • Let’s not target goose laying golden eggs
    PORT ORCHARD INDEPENDENT
    Jan 03 2009, 12:00 AM
  • Washington rivers flood; flood warning still on in some areas
    PNW LOCAL NEWS
    Jan 08 2009, 2:04 PM · UPDATED
  • Update: Island woman loses lower right leg to crash injuries; another surgery scheduled
    JOURNAL OF THE SAN JUANS
    Dec 23 2008
  • Redmond woman who died in ice-climbing accident loved the outdoors
    REDMOND REPORTER
    Jan 07 2009, 11:36 AM · UPDATED
  • Changes begin Wednesday for Whidbey News-Times
    WHIDBEY NEWS TIMES
    Jan 02 2009, 2:22 PM · UPDATED

Poll

 View results