Search results for "Small tumours"
showing 3 items of 3 documents
Flow cytometric DNA analysis of hepatic tumours on ultrasound-guided fine-needle aspirates
1992
A study was performed on a nonconsecutive series of 51 patients in order to assess the feasibility, reliability, and usefulness of flow cytometric (FCM) DNA analysis of samples obtained from benign and malignant hepatic tumours by means of ultrasound-guided fine-needle aspiration (UG-FNA). Cytological and often histological confirmation of the nature of the lesion was obtained in all cases from an expert pathologist. For FCM DNA analysis in 32 cases, it was also possible to use samples obtained at surgery from the actual tumours. There were no post UG-FNA complications, either early or late. It was possible to perform FCM DNA analysis on 6/7 (85.7%) of the benign tumour aspirates and all 44…
Vergleich von Malignitätskriterien in B-Scan- und Farbduplexsonographie mit dem histologischen Erscheinungsbild am Beispiel des experimentell induzie…
2005
BACKGROUND Malignant tumours of the head and the neck are characterised by typical signs of malignancy in greyscale- and colour-coded sonography. Sometimes, such criteria cannot be verified, and in such cases it remains unclear whether typical changes do not exist or whether we just cannot detect them with our high-end ultrasound units. We therefore compared our sonographical findings with the histology obtained in experimentally induced tumours. METHODS Experimental squamous cell carcinoma was induced subcutaneously in nude mice (n = 18), using four different cell lines. Ultrasound examination of the tumours was performed after 98 and 112 days, respectively, Central necrosis, rupture of th…
Einsatz des intraoperativen Ultraschalls in der Speicheldrüsenchirurgie
2006
Sonography of the head-and-neck region is well established in the preoperative diagnostic process of tumorous lesions. Its intraoperative use to localise small tumours, however, has been rarely investigated to date. We applied intraoperative ultrasound to 19 patients who underwent parotid surgery and evaluated the following criteria: intraoperative tumour presentation, scan quality, comparison between sonographic visualisation and tumour detection by palpation, histological tumour borders as well as postoperative complications. All lesions were reproduceable by intraoperative ultrasound and could be demonstrated in sufficient quality. None of the 19 parotid tumours could be identified by pa…