He holds numerous patents, and his academic interests include the application of technology in medical diagnostics, including immunochemistry, molecular diagnostics, computer-aided instruction, digital imaging in pathology, and the use of automated techniques in cytopathology and hematology.
32.
APP serves physician offices, hospitals, and surgery centers with sub-specialized anatomic and molecular pathology services including surgical pathology, cytopathology, dermatopathology, hematopathology, urologic pathology, gastrointestinal and liver pathology, renal pathology, and pediatric and perinatal pathology.
33.
Cytopathology is generally used on samples of free cells or tissue fragments ( in contrast to histopathology, which studies whole tissues ) and cytopathologic tests are sometimes called smear tests because the samples may be smeared across a glass microscope slide for subsequent staining and microscopic examination.
34.
"' Georgios Nikolaou Papanikolaou "'( or "'George Papanicolaou "';; 13 May 1883 19 February 1962 ) was a Greek pioneer in cytopathology and early cancer detection, and inventor of the " Pap smear ".
35.
Under the guidance of Dr . Camilla Cobb and Katherine Berberian of the University of Southern California s Department of Cytopathology, Cytopathology and Needle aspiration biopsy ( NAB ), also known as fine needle aspiration cytology ( FNAC ), procedures for breast biopsies were also introduced at the Wellness Center.
36.
Under the guidance of Dr . Camilla Cobb and Katherine Berberian of the University of Southern California s Department of Cytopathology, Cytopathology and Needle aspiration biopsy ( NAB ), also known as fine needle aspiration cytology ( FNAC ), procedures for breast biopsies were also introduced at the Wellness Center.
37.
"Until now it has been impossible to identify which of those women with atypical specimens are at high risk, " said Dr . Martha Hutchinson, director of cytopathology at Women and Infants'Hospital in Providence, R . I ., and one of the authors of the studies.
38.
Grading of carcinoma is most often done after a treating physician and / or surgeon obtains a sample of suspected tumor tissue using surgical resection, needle or surgical biopsy, direct washing or brushing of tumor tissue, sputum cytopathology, etc . A pathologist then examines the tumor and its stroma, perhaps utilizing staining, immunohistochemistry, flow cytometry, or other methods.
39.
Core biopsies, which preserve tissue architecture, should not be confused with fine needle aspiration specimens, which are analyzed using cytopathology techniques . " Incisional biopsies " are obtained through diagnostic surgical procedures that remove part of a suspicious lesion, whereas " excisional biopsies " remove the entire lesion, and are similar to therapeutic " surgical resections ."
40.
:"'Fellowships "': Cardiac Electrophysiology, Cardiology, Child Abuse, Cytopathology, Endocrinology, Gastroenterology, Head and Neck Oncologic / Microvascular Surgery, Hospice and Palliative Medicine, Infectious Disease, Interventional Cardiology, Medical Oncology, Nephrology, Pediatric Emergency Medicine, Pediatric Endocrinology, Pediatric Hematology-Oncology, Pediatric Infectious Diseases, Pulmonary Disease and Critical Care Medicine, Surgical Critical Care Medicine, Transfusion Medicine, Vascular Interventional Radiology, Vascular Neurology