From Biopsy to Diagnosis: How Pathologists Diagnose Cancer and Other Diseases
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- Опубликовано: 29 авг 2019
- This video provides a glimpse into the world of pathology by showing how pathologists and other laboratory professionals help to diagnose patients' biopsies. This behind-the-scenes look into the University of Michigan Department of Pathology shows how tissue is prepared to be viewed under a microscope and what pathologists are looking for in order to determine a diagnosis.
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Excellent explanation! I used this video in my Human Anatomy & Physiology class. I, also, am a certified Pathologists' Assistant and Histotechnician and this was a great overall, step-by-step of the entire process. Thank you!
Hi Victoria. Why is the tissue inked before dissection?
The purpose of inking before cutting is to indicate the margins (where a surgeon cuts), to preserve orientation (how the tissue or organ is located in or on the body) and allow the pathologist to know where they are when they look at a single cell-layer thick section of that tissue under a microscope. A different color signifies a specific location or orientation.
If, for example, cancer reaches or goes beyond a margin, then the pathologist can tell the patient's physician what stage that cancer is in and in which exact location the surgeon needs to back and take more of that tissue out.
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Wow, an incredible work that goes on behind the scene.🙏🏻
best video I've found about this subject on youtube
Great video, thanks for making this!
Concise and clear description - thank you!
Very interesting. Lots of steps with seemingly sophisticated equipment!
Very cool! Thanks for making this video!
Nice video, well done with accurate infromation
Thanks for this video 😮
Superb work sir 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
Bravo God bless you 🙌😇
Thank you very much for making this!!
Please what type of STAINING does the Machine for staining used in the video do on the slide placed in it ??
Looks complicated. Wonder how accurate they are and how often they give wrong results.
As a lab scientist for nearly my entire life, it is extremely troubling to me that they are not wearing gloves.
Have you also been a weeny for your entire life?
Remember my unfortunate diagnosis of pancreatic neuroendocrine cancer and it haven’t been a easy road
I hope you’re okay. I’m so sorry you’re going through this! 😞😩😢
Go Big Blue!!
wooow effing amazing!
awesome
This is a wonderfully informative video of the what Histo techs and Pathologists do. But the subtitles are ATROCIOUS. Better to not have it at all than the awful visual distraction it causes and lack of actual content provided.
Super
Nice
Don't know if anyone will see this or respond but I have a question regarding the pathology report from a biopsy being different than the pathology of the excised tumor. The question i have is biopsy said Er weak positive (1-10%), but the post surgical addendum says Er negative. Treatment moving forward would be different based on these results. Do they re analyze???
Why she dont use gloves?
They like to finger the tumor cells. It's generally frowned upon but they unionised and the hospital board cant do shit about it now.
I got biopsy on Monday in left hand side of neck
No gloves?
@fake Apple Store, I was thinking the same thing, it seems like with something so technical and precise one would wear gloves so they don't contaminate anything!
Good SMS