Tissues of the body L1.2 Flashcards
Relative sizes of human cells
Limit of resolution
Min distance 2 objects can be distinguished as two seperate entities
Light microscopy vs TEM vs SEM
SEM - 3D SPECIMEN
light is source, electron is source
State the relationship between resolution and wavelength
Resolution is inversely proportional to wavelength
Why is the practical limit of resolution different to the theoretic limit of resolution ?
Imperfections in lens
Therefore, practical lower than theoretical
Limit of resolution: LM vs EM
Conversion between micrometres and nanometres
1 micrometer = 10000 nanometers
1μm = 1000 nm
Histology of intestinal epithelium
ELECTRON MICROSCOPE FOR SECOND IMAGE - BLACK + WHITE, uses electrons to form image not visible light
What are benign samples?
Normal
What are malignant samples?
Cancerous
What are Malignancies?
Key characteristic histological changes
Clinical case scenario: You have a patient with an unusual looking mole. The differential diagnosis includes
1. An atypical benign mole
2. A seborrheic wart
3. Malignant melanoma
What would you do in this situation ?
We cannot tell immediately what the diagnosis is
Can tell from looking at it
If not, biopsy required
Here, I have put histology, you do not need to know at the moment, but very good for context.
What is Breslow thickness?
Measure of depth of melanoma invasion fron granular later of epidermis
The more the worse
State the use of periodic acid schiff (PAS)
Stain - stains carbs + glycoproteins megenta
Describe the process of performing histology
(From Biopsy to Microscopy):
- Collection (collection of tissue sample, this is biopsy)
- Fixation (chemical preservation of tissue)
- Embedding + Processing (dehydration + solidification of tissue)
- Sectioning (cutting solidified tissue)
- Staining (colouring the tissue section)
- Viewing / Analysis - microscopic viewing of stained tissue