A case study of bilateral congenital dislocated knees with a review of non-operative management of congenital dislocated knees.
ABSTRACT
Objectives: To raise the awareness of colleagues and other medical professionals to this uncommon condition and to improve the knowledge of medical personnel in the conservative management of congenital dislocation of the knee.
Manuscripts that are “Published at Acceptance” have been peer reviewed and accepted for publication by the Editorial Board of the West Indian Medical Journal. They may appear prior to being copy edited or formatted in the style guide of this Journal. The contents of the manuscript may change before it is published in its final form. While accepted manuscripts are not yet assigned a volume, issue, or page numbers, they can be cited using the DOI and date of e-publication. See our Instructions for Authors on how to properly cite manuscripts at this stage. Manuscripts in this section will be removed once they have been assigned to a volume and issue, but will still retain the DOI and date of e-publication.
Melanoma is the most serious form of skin cancer, and lifetime risk of melanoma is increasing rapidly both in men and women. Melanoma in the parotid gland is rarely seen and it is more likely to be metastatic disease. We present here a rare case of malignant melanoma from the forehead skin to the parotid glands bilaterally.