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New criteria method for diagnosis?

Forums General Melanoma Community New criteria method for diagnosis?

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      jennunicorn
      Participant

        I have never heard of the Menzies' Method either, but after reading about it, it makes a lot of sense! 

        Thanks for sharing, Lauren 🙂

        jennunicorn
        Participant

          I have never heard of the Menzies' Method either, but after reading about it, it makes a lot of sense! 

          Thanks for sharing, Lauren 🙂

          jennunicorn
          Participant

            I have never heard of the Menzies' Method either, but after reading about it, it makes a lot of sense! 

            Thanks for sharing, Lauren 🙂

            jodaro
            Participant

              Thanks for posting, very interesting. The Menzies method page also has a lot of great information about lesion features as well.

              While reading the first article this one from last month popped into the Recommended Reading box: http://www.cancernetwork.com/melanoma/number-moles-not-always-related-likelihood-melanoma

              Especially interesting to those of us with a bunch of moles.

               

              jodaro
              Participant

                Thanks for posting, very interesting. The Menzies method page also has a lot of great information about lesion features as well.

                While reading the first article this one from last month popped into the Recommended Reading box: http://www.cancernetwork.com/melanoma/number-moles-not-always-related-likelihood-melanoma

                Especially interesting to those of us with a bunch of moles.

                 

                jodaro
                Participant

                  Thanks for posting, very interesting. The Menzies method page also has a lot of great information about lesion features as well.

                  While reading the first article this one from last month popped into the Recommended Reading box: http://www.cancernetwork.com/melanoma/number-moles-not-always-related-likelihood-melanoma

                  Especially interesting to those of us with a bunch of moles.

                   

                  Janner
                  Participant

                    So the Menzies method (new to me, too) doesn't translate well for "things to watch for".  None of the terms are that self explanatory and it is quite complicated.  It might be more "sensitive" for melanoma but the ABCDE's are much easier to communicate to the general public.  Maybe it is better for clinical evaluation of a lesion, but certainly not for "awareness" type ads.

                    Janner
                    Participant

                      So the Menzies method (new to me, too) doesn't translate well for "things to watch for".  None of the terms are that self explanatory and it is quite complicated.  It might be more "sensitive" for melanoma but the ABCDE's are much easier to communicate to the general public.  Maybe it is better for clinical evaluation of a lesion, but certainly not for "awareness" type ads.

                      Janner
                      Participant

                        So the Menzies method (new to me, too) doesn't translate well for "things to watch for".  None of the terms are that self explanatory and it is quite complicated.  It might be more "sensitive" for melanoma but the ABCDE's are much easier to communicate to the general public.  Maybe it is better for clinical evaluation of a lesion, but certainly not for "awareness" type ads.

                        stars
                        Participant

                          This is interesting post, very informative. However, I feel compelled to post that one of my melanomas had both of the negative features (symmetry of pattern, presense of single colour) and was still melanoma. This is a fantastic link, but I would act on any new or changing lesion – even if the change is (as in my case) simply a darkening of the entire lesion from one shade of brown to another. Also, alot of these features are only distinguishable with a dermatoscope and a trained eye – not the views that the average Joe has at home, looking at lesions with the naked eye.

                          stars
                          Participant

                            This is interesting post, very informative. However, I feel compelled to post that one of my melanomas had both of the negative features (symmetry of pattern, presense of single colour) and was still melanoma. This is a fantastic link, but I would act on any new or changing lesion – even if the change is (as in my case) simply a darkening of the entire lesion from one shade of brown to another. Also, alot of these features are only distinguishable with a dermatoscope and a trained eye – not the views that the average Joe has at home, looking at lesions with the naked eye.

                            stars
                            Participant

                              This is interesting post, very informative. However, I feel compelled to post that one of my melanomas had both of the negative features (symmetry of pattern, presense of single colour) and was still melanoma. This is a fantastic link, but I would act on any new or changing lesion – even if the change is (as in my case) simply a darkening of the entire lesion from one shade of brown to another. Also, alot of these features are only distinguishable with a dermatoscope and a trained eye – not the views that the average Joe has at home, looking at lesions with the naked eye.

                              WithinMySkin
                              Participant
                                I agree with everyone’s thoughts here. Definitely not a great method for awareness of the general public. And there are definitely cases that don’t fit the criteria or would need to be seen through the scope. But I’m very glad we’re making progress. The blueish haze that they mentioned in the Menzies’ Method totally described my melanoma, and I hadn’t heard that described elsewhere. Every little bit helps!
                                WithinMySkin
                                Participant
                                  I agree with everyone’s thoughts here. Definitely not a great method for awareness of the general public. And there are definitely cases that don’t fit the criteria or would need to be seen through the scope. But I’m very glad we’re making progress. The blueish haze that they mentioned in the Menzies’ Method totally described my melanoma, and I hadn’t heard that described elsewhere. Every little bit helps!
                                  WithinMySkin
                                  Participant
                                    I agree with everyone’s thoughts here. Definitely not a great method for awareness of the general public. And there are definitely cases that don’t fit the criteria or would need to be seen through the scope. But I’m very glad we’re making progress. The blueish haze that they mentioned in the Menzies’ Method totally described my melanoma, and I hadn’t heard that described elsewhere. Every little bit helps!
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