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1.
IJMS-Iranian Journal of Medical Sciences. 2013; 38 (3): 263-266
in English | IMEMR | ID: emr-177165

ABSTRACT

Gastroesophageal reflux disease [GERD] is the main known etiological factor for Barrett's esophagus [BE], and BE is the precursor lesion of esophageal adenocarcinoma. The prevalence of BE is reported mostly from gastroenterology centers and there are only a few reported cases from outpatients with dyspepsia. A large number of patients with GERD have degrees of dyspepsia. This study primarily aimed to determine the prevalence of BE in dyspeptic patients. Outpatients with dyspepsia who referred to our Endoscopy Unit for endoscopy were included in this study. Esophageal biopsy was performed by an endoscopist, and BE diagnosis was established based on the abnormal appearance of the distal esophagus in endoscopy and also based on the presence of intestinal metaplasia in pathologic examination. The prevalence of BE was 5.4% [based on endoscopy] and 3.7% [based on pathology]. Sixty-nine percent of the patients with confirmed BE were younger than 50 and 31% were over 50 years of age. Eighty-one percent of the patients with confirmed BE reported GERD symptoms as their dominant dyspepsia symptom, whereas only 20.4% of those without BE reported GERD symptoms [P<0.001]. Additionally, BE had a relatively high prevalence in our dyspeptic patients. The high prevalence of GERD symptoms in BE underscores the need for endoscopy for dyspeptic patients

2.
IJMS-Iranian Journal of Medical Sciences. 2012; 37 (2): 105-111
in English | IMEMR | ID: emr-131285

ABSTRACT

The touch preparation technique is an accurate and rapid method, and when used as intraoperative consultation examination technique it preserves a good amount of tissue for paraffin embedded sections. This study aimed at examining the accuracy of the touch preparation technique by comparing its diagnosis with that of final pathological diagnosis made by microscopic examinations. The diagnoses of 139 central nervous system lesions by touch preparation technique and paraffin-embedded sections were compared. Touch preparation technique diagnosed correctly 118 [84%] of the lesions. However, the technique failed to correctly diagnose 12% of the cases. The highest rate of accurate diagnosis [100%] was observed in five types out of 11 types of tumor examined. However, the technique was not able to diagnose hydatid cysts correctly. The findings indicate that touch preparation technique may be useful in diagnosing tumor type during surgical operations. Touch preparation technique is very accurate for intraoperative diagnosis. However, adequate clinical history, neuroimaging details, and the intraoperative impressions of the neurosurgeons, if provided, help the pathologists to improve the diagnostic accuracy of the technique


Subject(s)
Brain Neoplasms/pathology , Touch , Intraoperative Period , Paraffin Embedding , Central Nervous System/pathology , Central Nervous System Neoplasms/diagnosis , Central Nervous System Neoplasms/pathology , Frozen Sections
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