Cosmetic changes after soft X-ray therapy are relatively frequent. Treatment parameters, tumour thickness and field size have only a minor influence. Few patients, but more women than men, were irritated by the visual appearance of the irradiated field.
Late pruritus, burning, epiphora and insufficient occlusion of the mouth do not considerably reduce the value of soft X-ray therapy because these adverse effects usually are not experienced permanently. Total dose and TDF should not be chosen higher than necessary.
Basal cell carcinoma (BCC) is the most common tumor in humans and is defined as a slow-growing, locally invasive, epithelial skin tumor which rarely metastasizes. The first line treatment is surgical excision with histologic examination of the tumor margins, but numerous alternative therapies are available. A 75-year old patient with the most destructive form of BCC, ulcus terebrans, involving the scalp and invading the frontal bone. We discuss the problems and therapeutic limitations for this unusual BCC variant.
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