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  • Book
    Stuart J. Schnitt, Laura C. Collins.
    Contents:
    Normal anatomy and histology
    Reactive, inflammatory, and nonproliferative lesions
    Intraductal proliferative lesions : usual ductal hyperplasia, atypical ductalhyperplasia, and ductal carcinoma in situ
    Columnar cell lesions and flat epithelial atypia
    Lobular carcinoma in situ and atypical lobular hyperplasia
    Fibroepithelial lesions
    Adenosis and sclerosing lesions
    Papillary lesions
    Microinvasive carcinoma
    Invasive breast cancer
    Spindle cell lesions
    Vascular lesions
    Other mesenchymal lesions
    Miscellaneous rare lesions
    Nipple disorders
    Male breast lesions
    Breast lesions in children and adolescents
    Axillary lymph nodes
    Treatment effects
    Specimen processing, evaluation, and reporting.
    Digital Access Ovid 2018
  • Article
    Pertschuk LP, Moccia LF, Rosen Y, Lyons H, Marino CM, Rashford AA, Wollschlager CM.
    Am J Clin Pathol. 1977 Nov;68(5):553-7.
    Lung tissue obtained from eight consecutive patients with systemic lupus erythematosus complicated by severe, acute pulmonary disease was studied by both light and immunofluorescence microscopy. Light microscopic examination disclosed interstitial pneumonia in four cases, cytomegalovirus pneumonitis in one case, bronchiolitis and peribronchiolitis in one case, pulmonary infarction in one case and focal atelectasis in the remaining case. Direct immunofluorescence examination revealed focally bound immunoglobulins or complement (C3) within pleural and/or pneumocyte nuclei in each specimen. Immunohistologic studies in these cases may thus suggest a diagnosis of systemic lupus erythematosus with acute pulmonary complications, despite the lack of specificity of the pathologic changes seen by light microscopy.
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