Difference between revisions of "Gross pathology"

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'''Gross pathology''', also simply '''gross''', refers to the macroscopic pathology, and the macroscopic assessment of pathology specimens.  It may include preparation of tissue for a microscopic examination.  It is an essential part of pathologic assessments.
'''Gross pathology''', also simply '''gross''', refers to the macroscopic pathology, and the macroscopic assessment of pathology specimens.  It may include preparation of tissue for a microscopic examination.  It is an essential part of pathologic assessments.
==Opening==
:May go by the term ''freshing''.
*The first part of a gross pathologic assessment.
Components:
*Painting with ink - if applicable.
**A good general rule is: ''ink before you think''.
*Cutting open for fixation - if not immediately finished.


==Gross only==
==Gross only==

Revision as of 11:38, 30 July 2013

Gross pathology, also simply gross, refers to the macroscopic pathology, and the macroscopic assessment of pathology specimens. It may include preparation of tissue for a microscopic examination. It is an essential part of pathologic assessments.

Opening

May go by the term freshing.
  • The first part of a gross pathologic assessment.

Components:

  • Painting with ink - if applicable.
    • A good general rule is: ink before you think.
  • Cutting open for fixation - if not immediately finished.

Gross only

Which specimens are "gross only" typically depends on institutional policy.[1]

Common gross only specimens

Gross spot diagnosis

Heart

Heart valve:

Heart - other:

Cardiovascular

Lungs

Gastrointestinal pathology

Esophagus:

Stomach:

Duodenum:

Liver:

Gallbladder:

Pancreas:

Small bowel:

Appendix:

Large bowel:

Gynecologic pathology

Ovary:

Uterine tube:

Uterus:

Uterine cervix:

Dermatopathology

Tumour:

Possible syndromic:

Neuropathology

Bleeds:

Tumours:

Non-tumour:

Neurodegenerative:

Genitourinary pathology

Kidney:

Testis:

Paratesticular:

Placenta

Membranes:

Disc:

Cord:

  • Two vessel umbilical cord.
  • False knot.
  • True knot.
  • Membranous insertion (AKA velamentous insertion).
  • Furcate insertion - vessels separate before inserting.

Fetal

Genetic:

See also

References

  1. Zarbo, RJ.; Nakhleh, RE. (Feb 1999). "Surgical pathology specimens for gross examination only and exempt from submission: a College of American Pathologists Q-Probes study of current policies in 413 institutions.". Arch Pathol Lab Med 123 (2): 133-9. doi:10.1043/0003-9985(1999)1230133:SPSFGE2.0.CO;2. PMID 10050786.
  2. Rose, Alan G. (2008). Atlas of Gross Pathology with Histologic Correlation (1st ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 447. ISBN 978-0521868792.

External links