Imaging has come a long way in recent
years, but there remains a middle ground between physical examination and
MRI - light transillumination. I regularly use a penlight in the office
as a low tech but often helpful diagnostic tool. Tumors fall into four
groups based on opacity relative to surrounding tissues:
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Click on each image for a larger picture |
Case 1: Mass arising a year after nail bed excision and skin graft for nail bed squamous cell carcinoma. |
Xrays show discrete calcification in the area, consistent with heterotopic ossification. |
Transillumination appearance, dark or opaque. |
Case 2: Firm mass arising just distal to the PIP joint, fixed to deep structures. |
Xray shows a contour change of the middle phalanx deep to the tumor. |
Transillumination is indeterminate, slightly darker than surrounding tissues. |
Intraoperative finding: classic giant cell tumor, arising from the PIP collateral ligament. |
Case 3: Painless dorsal middle phalanx mass. |
A standard plastic disposable flashlight is fine, but better if the tip is wrapped in opaque electrical tape to limit the light flare through the sides of the flashlight. |
Bright transillumination confirms the diagnosis of ganglion cyst. Treatment: observation. |
Case 4: similar to case 3. |
Flashlight |
A picture of the illumination is more obvious with the finger placed on a lit transparency light box. |
Case 5: illustrating the use of transillumination even in the darg skinned patient. Chronic dorsal distal phalanx tumor and concave nail deformity: |
Flashlight: |
Transillumination: clearly a mucous cyst. |
Intraoperative excision and joint debridement, demonstration of the deep pull out sutures used to close the deep skin layer of an eponychial splitting incision: |
Healed. |
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