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Digital pathology in diagnostic cytopathology
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Journal of Cytology & Histology

ISSN: 2157-7099

Open Access

Digital pathology in diagnostic cytopathology


2nd International Conference on Cytopathology & Histopathology

August 10-12, 2016 Las Vegas, USA

Ichiro Mori

International University of Health and Welfare Mita Hospital, Japan

Scientific Tracks Abstracts: J Cytol Histol

Abstract :

Aim: Together with recent advance of digital technology, digital pathology is getting popular. However, conservative pathologists believe the superiority of conventional microscope. This time, Iâ??d like to show advantages of digital cytopathology assuming every glass slides are digitalized at the beginning. Material & Methods: We used toco (CLARO, Japan) as WSI scanner. Distance between 2 points is measured by iViewer (CLARO, Japan). Nuclear area and circumference is measured by eCyto (e-Path, Japan) to compare breast cancer specimen with different grade of nuclear atypia. RGB and gray scale value is decided by Photoshop Elements 13 (Adobe, USA) using oral squamous cell carcinoma specimens. Results: We could easily measure the distance on WSI to describe the invasion depth by micrometer. Breast cancer cells diagnosed grade 3 nuclear atypia showed nuclear area about 1000-3000 micro-square meters while grade 1 cells show 450-700. The orange cytoplasmic color of oral squamous cell carcinoma showed 190-220/R, 60-80/G and 20-50/B while non-neoplastic squamous cell showed 170-190/R, 120-180/G and 110-150/B. We also could describe nuclear chromatin density by gray scale rather than â??increased nuclear chromatinâ?. Discussion: Digital images have apparent advantages in image database application where we can retrieve previous images directly from the database with no concern about color fading or slide label peeling off. Moreover, we could show the advantages of digital images by numerical conversion of morphologic features. Describing these so-called â??atypicalâ? features by numeric value we may increase the accuracy and the reproducibility of cytological diagnosis that conventional microscopy could not provide.

Biography :

Ichiro Mori has completed his PhD from Gunma University and Postdoctoral studies from Tokai University School of Medicine. He is a Professor of Pathology, Mita Hospital, International University of Health and Welfare. He has published more than 25 papers in reputed journals.

Email: ichiro-m@iuhw.ac.jp

Google Scholar citation report
Citations: 2334

Journal of Cytology & Histology received 2334 citations as per Google Scholar report

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