Publications by authors named "Alexandra M Danakas"

Background: Frozen section is a standard of care procedure during thoracic surgery when an immediate diagnosis is needed. An alternative procedure is intraoperative cytology. Video-assisted thoracic surgery is currently widely used for thoracic surgical procedures.

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Introduction: Lymph node sampling by endobronchial ultrasound-guided transbronchial needle aspiration (EBUS-TBNA) is the state of art procedure for staging the mediastinum and hilar regions in lung cancer patients. Our experience of implementing the real-time cytopathology intervention (RTCI) process for intraoperative EBUS-TBNAs is presented. This study is aimed to describe in detail the RTCI process for EBUS-TBNAs, and assess its utility and diagnostic yield before and after its implementation in parallel to conventional rapid on-site evaluation (c-ROSE).

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Ischemic colitis (IC) results from reduced colonic vascular perfusion, accounting for 50-60% of all gastrointestinal ischemic episodes. IC leads to mucosal damage with clinical symptom severity developing based on the duration and extent of colonic injury. In rare cases IC may form a mass-like lesion mimicking malignancy.

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Background: No consensus has been reached for an optimal method of quantifying discontinuous tumor foci separated by intervening benign tissue on prostate biopsy (PBx). We examined sets of PBx, where cancer involved only one core, and corresponding radical prostatectomy (RP) specimens.

Methods And Results: Cases were divided into 3 groups-Group 1 (n = 80): <3 mm in end-to-end tumor measurement (continuous/discontinuous); Group 2 (n = 22): ≥3 mm in tumor length (continuous); and Group 3 (n = 15): ≥3 mm in end-to-end tumor measurement (discontinuous).

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No recent studies have focused on assessing the role of intraoperative frozen section assessment (FSA) in the status of surgical margins (SMs) relating to the outcomes of penectomy cases. In this study, we investigated the utility of routine FSA of the SMs in men undergoing penectomy. A retrospective review identified consecutive patients who underwent partial (n = 26) or total (n = 12) penectomy for penile squamous cell carcinoma at our institution from 2004 to 2015.

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