Surgical treatment of congenital malenocytic nevus of cheek in adult: an interesting case report

Authors

  • Madhusoodan Gupta Department of Plastic Surgery Sri Sai Superspeciality Hospital, Moradabad, Uttar Pradesh, India http://orcid.org/0000-0001-9409-907X
  • Deepti Varshney Department of Pathology, Pathkind labs Moradabad, Uttar Pradesh, India

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18203/2320-6012.ijrms20213430

Keywords:

Congenital melanocytic nevus, Aesthetic deformity, Nasolabial crease

Abstract

Congenital melanocytic nevus (CMN) is a rare disease, which is present from birth. CMN has pigmented surface and hairs. CMN are classified in three types according to their size, small size less than 2 cm, medium size 2-20 cm and large or giant size more than 20 cm. If CMN is present over the cheek it causes significant aesthetic deformity. It poses a great challenge to aesthetic and reconstruction surgeon to excise and reconstruct this lesion over the cheek. Cheek is central facial unit and make the largest part of face. Here author presents a case of 20 years old young female who had medium size congenital melanocytic nevi over the left cheek at malar aesthetic subunit. Author planned a single stage excision followed by primary closure. Wound healed well without any complication and sutureline was camouflaged in left nasolabial crease with good aesthetic result.

Author Biographies

Madhusoodan Gupta, Department of Plastic Surgery Sri Sai Superspeciality Hospital, Moradabad, Uttar Pradesh, India

Consultant Plastic, Aesthetic, Burn & Reconstructive Surgery at Sri Sai Superspeciality Hospital Moradabad

Deepti Varshney, Department of Pathology, Pathkind labs Moradabad, Uttar Pradesh, India

Consultant Pathologist at Pathkind Labs , Moradabad, Uttar Pradesh

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Published

2021-08-25

How to Cite

Gupta, M., & Varshney, D. (2021). Surgical treatment of congenital malenocytic nevus of cheek in adult: an interesting case report. International Journal of Research in Medical Sciences, 9(9), 2835–2837. https://doi.org/10.18203/2320-6012.ijrms20213430

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Section

Case Reports