Book Details

Questions in Daily Urologic Practice : Updates for Urologists and Diagnostic Pathologists

Publication year: 2008

ISBN: 978-4-431-72819-1

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The principal role of the diagnostic surgical pathologist is to serve a patient by assisting the clinician in charge of the patient's care. In that capacity,the pathologist provides the vital informationthat should be directly and indirectly useful in guiding the clinician toward the most appropriate therapy. The material pathologists receive most commonly is a biopsy or a part of an organ removed after a definitive pro- dure. To extract useful information, pathological evaluation proceeds according to a set of guidelines. Simply reporting a diagnosis of cancer is inadequate. Detailed additional information is needed so that the clinician can go on to establish a the- peutic plan as needed. To best serve the patient, close interaction between the cli- cian and the pathologist is vital. In the field of urological pathology, there are problems specific to this system. Typically, in the prostate, because of its location, there is little room for a surgeon to work to obtain adequate resection margins, unlike with many other organs.


Subject: Medicine, Grading, Staging, Biopsy, Cancer, Carcinoma, Cell, Differential diagnosis, Kidney, Pathogenesis, Prostate cancer, Prostatectomy, Renal cell carcinoma, Tissue, Tumor, Urology, Pathology