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  • Book
    Xichun Sun.
    Summary: This book represents a daring and rarely attempted endeavor to bridge the gap between histopathology and molecular medicine in that cutting-edge molecular findings are seamlessly integrated into the key morphological features. This volume also includes discussions of short lists of organ-based benign lesions with concerning morphological features. Presented in the differential diagnosis section, they will not only serve as useful checklists for the surgical pathologist who is seriously contemplating a diagnosis of malignancy due to the observation of some cytological or histological atypia, but also help hone the key features of each malignant atypia. Well-Differentiated Malignancies: New Perspectives provides an innovative resource on the difficult topic of well-differentiated malignancies for pathology residents, fellows and for those already in clinical practice.

    Contents:
    Cutaneous Tissue
    Soft Tissues
    Skeletal System
    Nervous System
    Genitourinary System
    Female Reproductive System
    Gastrointestinal System, Pancreatobiliary Tract and Liver
    Lung and Pleura
    Thyroid Gland, Salivary Gland and Thymus
    Mammary Gland.
    Digital Access Springer 2015
  • Article
    Bullock JY, Booth RJ, Wilson JD.
    N Z Med J. 1979 Jan 10;89(627):11-3.
    The occurrence of antinuclear, smooth muscle, parietal cell, reticulum, thyroid microsomal and mitochondrial autoantibodies in the sera of 1641 healthy males and 959 healthy females was investigated. Females were also treated for antibodies to adrenal cortex and salivary gland. A rising frequency of autoantibodies with increasing age was observed in both sexes with the average frequency being 19.3 percent for females and 15.9 percent for males. The most commonly detected autoantibodies were those directed against reticulin and thyroid microsomes. Mitochondrial, adrenal and salivary gland autoantibodies, and antinuclear antibody titres greater than 1:32 occurred so rarely in the healthy population that their appearance in patients should be regarded as a possible indication of clinical disease.
    Digital Access Access Options