Oncology education for post-graduate medical trainees is mostly clinic-based with didactic lectures. However, a 3-4-week rotation lacks full exposure to the vast field of oncology, resulting in an educational gap. We felt there is a need for a standard curriculum to educate trainees on common oncology topics and encourage self-directed learning.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Following the completion of treatment and as they enter the follow-up phase, breast cancer patients (BCPs) often recount feeling 'lost in transition', and are left with many questions concerning how their ongoing care and monitoring for recurrence will be managed. Family physicians (FPs) also frequently report feeling ill-equipped to provide follow-up care to BCPs. In this three-phase qualitative pilot study we designed, implemented and evaluated a multi-faceted survivorship care plan (SCP) to address the information needs of BCPs at our facility and of their FPs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPituitary tuberculomas, mimicking adenomas are very unusual. We describe a rare case of a patient with an exclusively intrasellar mass, and who presented with severe headaches and loss of libido. The lesion was approached trans-sphenoidally and pathological examination revealed a tuberculoma.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurol India
September 1999
The light and electronmicroscopic changes are described in two cases of medullomyoblastoma, and compared with the changes seen in a case of foetal rhabdomyoma. The medullomyoblastomas in two children aged 8 and 5 years, consisted predominantly of classical type of medulloblastoma cells, along with few to many 'strap cells' or 'myoid cells' which, on closer examination, showed clear cross striations, consistent with muscle fibres or myofibrils. The primitive myoid cells were similar to those encountered in larger numbers in a post-auricular rhabdomyoma, possibly of foetal origin in a 40 day old infant.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAJNR Am J Neuroradiol
January 1998
Purpose: We sought to document the appearance of isolated cysticercal infestation of single extraocular muscles on MR and CT studies, and to compare these findings with results of histopathologic examination.
Methods: Six MR and three CT examinations of the orbits of six patients were reviewed. Histopathologic confirmation of the diagnosis was available in three patients, and response to specific medical therapy was available in one.
Neuropathol Appl Neurobiol
June 1996
The first clear-cut description of a virus-nerve cell interaction was made by Adelchi Negri in 1903 with the detection of cytoplasmic bodies (Negri bodies) in subsets of neurons in the brain from rabies-infected animals. A biographical sketch of Negri is given here; he was born in Perugia, Italy, in 1875 and died in Pavia in 1912. In 1900 Negri became assistant to Camillo Golgi, who encouraged him to study rabies-infected brains with histological techniques.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA reliable method for identification of the subset of population predisposed to coronary heart disease (CHD) would aid a targetted implementation of intervention strategies. To this end, a mathematical formula was developed based on stepwise linear discriminant analysis. Age, body mass index, the number of associated coronary risk factors and a large number of biochemical markers were analysed by computerised discriminant analysis on a test sample of 203 subjects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe mechanisms and the changes described herein typically begin with a dense basal meningeal exudate often resulting from a "Rich focus" along the basal surface of the cerebrum or ventricular ependyma. In the interpeduncular fossa, when the exudate is copious, among other structures the proximal parts of the optic nerves and of the internal carotid arteries are seen surrounded and compressed by the exudate. This exudate is made up of small and large mononuclear cells, including epithelioid cells, which also act as macrophages and may fuse to form Langhans' giant cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe object of the study was to determine if atherogenic markers in the offspring reflected family history of coronary heart disease (CHD). Two hundred and four male subjects aged 9-18 years, mean age 13.3 +/- 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLight and electronmicroscopic changes in lung biopsies were studied in six patients with tropical pulmonary eosinophilia, aged 20 to 37 years, of varying duration, and with severe haematologic (blood eosinophil count of 3,600 to 18,200 per mm3), and respiratory changes. On light microscopy the main pathologic reaction consisted of large mononuclear cells and eosinophils in and around the alveoli and blood vessels, and proliferated reticulin. Fine structural changes probably being described for the first time, included the presence of many alveolar macrophages characterised by abundant cytoplasm, irregular or stunted microvilli, increased phagolysosomes with ingested debris, and depletion of other organelles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLight and electronmicroscopic changes in 5 formalin-fixed brains, and one glutaraldehyde-fixed brain biopsy, from patients with Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in the age range of 45 to 65 years, are described. These 6 patients (out of 7 reported clinically earlier and 2 unreported) had classical manifestations with progressive dementia, pyramidal signs and myoclonic jerks. Light microscopy showed neuronal and nerve fibre loss, moderate or severe spongiform change, astrocytic proliferation and absence of inflammatory reaction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIndian J Med Res
February 1990
The anorectic compound fenfluramine hydrochloride was injected into young Holtzman strain rats (from days 6 to 40 of life), at the dose of 75 mg/kg body weight. Intralysosomal lamellar bodies (LBs) were seen in the endothelial cells, pericytes, the perivascular astrocyte processes and occasionally in the lumen. The pathology of myelinated fibres varied from thinning of myelin to complete demyelination and, at times, presence of dense bodies in the axons, the changes perhaps being a result of the oligodendroglia damage.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn a histological and histochemical study of multiple biopsies of unaffected segments of the bowel from 15 patients with Hirschsprung's Disease (H.D.), the AChE or non-specific esterase and the NADPH tetrazolium reductase enzyme reactions proved to be useful in identification of myenteric plexus islands; and acid phosphatase for the delineation of individual neurones.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA case of rabies was treated with intensive medical support. This led to a prolongation of life to 25 days. The neurologic progression of the disease was monitored clinically and with serial EEG.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn a histological and fine structural study of right atrial biopsy specimens from 31 patients with rheumatic heart disease (RHD), aged 7 to 46 years, and 11 patients with congenital heart disease (CHD), aged 3 to 36 years, nerve fibers or endings were seen by electron microscopy in 11 specimens. There was concurrence of ordinary axons along with terminals bearing pale cholinergic or dark adrenergic synaptic vesicles. Smaller and denser cholinergic vesicles suggested proliferation followed by exhaustion of such nerve endings.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe pathological pattern of 86 brain 'tumours' in childhood during the years 1981-85 (out of a total of 586 for all ages), showed a higher proportion of neoplasms and a much lower of tuberculomas compared to the preceding three decades. A large number of histologically unusual cases was revealed. Through tissue culture of brain tumours we carried out morphological, histochemical and fine structural study of the tumour cells in vitro.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEleven cases of Wilms' tumour received at Banglore Medical College, Bangalore are being studied focussing on the histopathological appearance of these tumours. One case exhibiting neuronal and glial differentiation, which is a rare observation, was noticed and is reported. The clinicopathological features and a brief review of literature are being presented.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwenty-seven epileptic patients, most from low socioeconomic groups and aged 15-54 years, were studied for effects of prolonged anticonvulsant medication. They had received the usual doses of phenobarbitone and diphenylhydantoin (PHT) regularly for 3-32 years, with control of seizures, and had not taken any B-vitamins in the year before investigation. Besides reduced serum and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) folate levels, significantly increased levels of total vitamin B6 in CSF and serum and of vitamin B12 in serum were found in patients as compared with normal healthy subjects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPathol Res Pract
December 1986
The fine structure of cells of the mononuclear phagocyte series (MPS) and a few other cells with phagocytic capacity, has been critically evaluated, mainly from an electronmicroscopic examination of the reactive border zone of 11 human brain tuberculomas, which provide ideal material for the study of macrophages. Most of them appeared to be blood monocyte-derived epithelioid cells of various forms and stages. The cytoplasm of these cells showed either more rough ER representing protein synthesising activity; or more frequently, phagosomes, phagolysosomes, dense bodies or empty vacuoles, representing various stages of ingestion and digestion of necrotic material.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neurol Sci
September 1986
Identification of the Negri bodies in the brain of an 8-year-old boy who died 8 days after a paralytic illness and 20 days after a dog bite, and who had received 9 injections of Semple's anti-rabies vaccine, provided evidence that he died of acute rabies encephalitis and not of post-vaccinal allergic encephalomyelitis. The Negri bodies in the human subject and those seen in the inoculated mouse differed in their morphological structure: the former consisted of a matrix of very fine granular material bearing larger granules or strands of higher electron-density resembling nucleic acids and representing products of host cell-virus interaction; and the latter showed better defined areas of granular matrix containing tubular, bullet-shaped and elongated forms of viral structures, and nucleocapsids or capsule-deficient cores, representing the virions, emerging from them. Fine structural examination of the patient's brain and of the inoculated mouse has provided evidence of the pleomorphism of the Negri bodies and the various stages of formation of viral material and virions in them, the animal alone showing the mature virions of rabies, and proving the infectivity of the Negri bodies of the human brain.
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