The lecture itself: perfect! The sound-quality (at least on my tablet) is somtimes horrible. But this is unimportant compared to the instructive video! Thank you so much 🙏
Sorry about that. When I was learning basic EM pathology, my attending ALWAYS had music going on in the background so I may have picked up the habit in a lofty institution but I have since recording this tried harder to eliminate background noise.
Hello professor, What if there are 6 plasma cells noted on the endometrial biopsy taken on day 9 of a 26 yrs old woman with history of recurrent pregnancy losses? Could it be endometritis?
That is a significant number of plasma cells at a point when there should be none, so without other explanation, I would be supportive of a diagnosis of endometritis.
There is a back story here. I have heard that many do not like the music background, and I have tried to respect that in subsequent videos. But I learned a lot of gyn pathology, and especially endometrial dating, with an Italian pathologist, Dr. Piero Paci, at the Brigham who ALWAYS had music on in the background, often opera, so for me, it seemed a sort of tribute to him to include it in this video.
Question: what does the following mean from a endometrial curettage: Endometrial curettings. Step sections show fragments of endometrium with tubular glands and occasional mitotic figures. A few fragments with spindled stroma are also present, and many of the glands are devoid of surrounding stroma.
It sounds like a description of a benign proliferative phase endometrium, but because there is little stroma, it could be because the patient is getting older, towards or around menopause, or the sample was scant for some other reason. I don't see anything in the report to be of concern, but it needs to be coordinated with the reason the sample was taken. That's the job of your clinician and your pathologist.
Thank you so much dear prof for all your tremendous efforts
It's my pleasure
What a beautiful opera! Is it Madame Butterfly? Thank you for this instructive video!
The lecture itself: perfect! The sound-quality (at least on my tablet) is somtimes horrible. But this is unimportant compared to the instructive video! Thank you so much 🙏
Very informative lecture. Thank you very much; however, the background music was really distracting specially for the beginners like me
Sorry about that. When I was learning basic EM pathology, my attending ALWAYS had music going on in the background so I may have picked up the habit in a lofty institution but I have since recording this tried harder to eliminate background noise.
@@LewisHassellVGPA oh no problem. Thank you very much for the great lecture. I always enjoy your videos.
Hello professor,
What if there are 6 plasma cells noted on the endometrial biopsy taken on day 9 of a 26 yrs old woman with history of recurrent pregnancy losses? Could it be endometritis?
That is a significant number of plasma cells at a point when there should be none, so without other explanation, I would be supportive of a diagnosis of endometritis.
v nicely explained, thank you.
though I must say that I am not used to, yet, doing academics with a musical background :):)
There is a back story here. I have heard that many do not like the music background, and I have tried to respect that in subsequent videos. But I learned a lot of gyn pathology, and especially endometrial dating, with an Italian pathologist, Dr. Piero Paci, at the Brigham who ALWAYS had music on in the background, often opera, so for me, it seemed a sort of tribute to him to include it in this video.
thank you for this!
Question: what does the following mean from a endometrial curettage: Endometrial curettings.
Step
sections show fragments of endometrium
with tubular
glands and occasional mitotic figures.
A few fragments with spindled stroma
are also
present,
and many of the glands are
devoid of surrounding stroma.
It sounds like a description of a benign proliferative phase endometrium, but because there is little stroma, it could be because the patient is getting older, towards or around menopause, or the sample was scant for some other reason. I don't see anything in the report to be of concern, but it needs to be coordinated with the reason the sample was taken. That's the job of your clinician and your pathologist.
@@LewisHassell-OPEN thank you so much for your reply.