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Mohs micrographic surgery is a specialized, highly effective technique for removing skin cancers. It was developed in the 1930’s by Dr. Frederick Mohs at the University of Wisconsin and is now practiced throughout the world. Mohs surgery differs from other skin cancer treatments in that it permits the immediate and complete microscopic examination of the removed cancer tissue so that all roots and extensions of the cancer can be eliminated. Mohs surgery has the highest reported cure rate of all treatments for skin cancer. ![]() |
Physicians who have the training, surgical and laboratory facilities, and the staff to perform this specialized technique practice Mohs surgery.
WHY REMOVE SKIN CANCERS WITH MOHS SURGERY?
Some skin cancers are deceptively large—far bigger under the skin than they appear to be from the surface. These cancers may have “roots” in the skin or along blood vessels, nerves, or cartilage. Also, skin cancers that recur after previous treatments may send out extensions deep under scar tissue that has formed. Mohs surgery is specifically designed to remove these cancers by tracking and removing these cancerous “roots.”HOW IS MOHS SURGERY DONE?
There are 3 steps involved in Mohs surgery:The skin is made completely numb using local anesthetic. The visible cancer is removed with a thin layer of additional tissue. This takes only a few minutes and the patient may then return to the waiting room. A detailed diagram (a Mohs map) of the removed specimen is drawn.
The specimen is color coded to distinguish top from bottom and left from right. A technician freezes the tissue and removes very thin slices from the entire edge and undersurface. These slices are placed on microscope slides and stained for examination under a microscope. This is the most time consuming part of the procedure, often requiring an hour or more to complete.
Dr. Memar then carefully examines these slides under the microscope. This allows examination of the entire surgical margin of the removed tissue. That is, the entire undersurface and the complete edge of the specimen is examined. All microscopic roots of the cancer can thus be precisely identified and pinpointed on the Mohs map.
If more cancer is found on the microscopic slides, Dr. Memar uses the Mohs map to remove additional tissue only where cancer is present. This allows the Mohs surgery technique to leave the smallest possible surgical defect because no guesswork is involved in deciding where to remove additional tissue. Only tissue around the “roots” and extensions of cancer is removed.

