Difference between revisions of "Foreign material"
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WITH FOOD. | WITH FOOD. | ||
- SCANT STRIPPED BRONCHIAL LINING EPITHELIUM WITHOUT APPARENT PATHOLOGY. | - SCANT STRIPPED BRONCHIAL LINING EPITHELIUM WITHOUT APPARENT PATHOLOGY. | ||
</pre> | |||
<pre> | |||
SOFT TISSUE, LEFT ARM, EXCISION: | |||
- FOREIGN BODY, APPEARANCE COMPATIBLE WITH A PIECE OF WOOD (GROSS ONLY). | |||
- FOREIGN BODY-REACTION (ACUTE AND CHRONIC INFLAMMATION WITH HISTIOCYTES | |||
AND RARE GIANT CELLS). | |||
- NEGATIVE FOR MALIGNANCY. | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
Revision as of 11:51, 26 June 2014
Foreign material is something that is extrinsic to the body.
Foreign body redirect to this article.
Fecal material is dealt with separately in the article fecal material.
General
- Relatively common.
- Seen in a number of contexts.
Gross
- Looks like it doesn't belong, e.g. food.
- Obvious foreign bodies are gross only diagnoses.
- Examples:
- A dildo removed surgically from a body orifice.
- A bullet removed in surgery - should be handled with care, photographed... probably will become evidence.
- Examples:
Microscopic
Features:
- Honeycomb-like or cartilage-like or muscle-like without nuclei.
DDx:
- Fecal material - if in colon/rectum.
- Necrotic material.
Sign out
FOREIGN BODY, RIGHT LOWER LOBE, RETRIEVAL: - MORPHOLOGICALLY CONSISTENT WITH A GREEN PEA (GROSS ONLY).
FOREIGN BODY, BRONCHUS INTERMEDIUS, RETRIEVAL: - MUCOUS WITH NEUTROPHILS AND MACROPHAGES. - BENIGN CALCIFICATIONS. - FOREIGN MATERIAL (HONEYCOMB-LIKE AND CARTILAGE-LIKE WITHOUT NUCLEI) -- COMPATIBLE WITH FOOD. - SCANT STRIPPED BRONCHIAL LINING EPITHELIUM WITHOUT APPARENT PATHOLOGY.
SOFT TISSUE, LEFT ARM, EXCISION: - FOREIGN BODY, APPEARANCE COMPATIBLE WITH A PIECE OF WOOD (GROSS ONLY). - FOREIGN BODY-REACTION (ACUTE AND CHRONIC INFLAMMATION WITH HISTIOCYTES AND RARE GIANT CELLS). - NEGATIVE FOR MALIGNANCY.