Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- 1 Introduction to lung cytopathology and small tissue biopsy
- 2 Normal anatomy, histology, and cytology
- 3 Infectious diseases
- 4 Other non-neoplastic lesions
- 5 Benign lung tumors and tumor-like lesions
- 6 Squamous, large cell, and sarcomatoid carcinomas
- 7 Adenocarcinoma
- 8 Neuroendocrine neoplasms
- 9 Uncommon primary neoplasms
- 10 Metastatic and secondary neoplasms
- 11 Anterior mediastinum
- 12 Middle and posterior mediastinum
- 13 Role of ancillary studies
- Index
1 - Introduction to lung cytopathology and small tissue biopsy
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 January 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- 1 Introduction to lung cytopathology and small tissue biopsy
- 2 Normal anatomy, histology, and cytology
- 3 Infectious diseases
- 4 Other non-neoplastic lesions
- 5 Benign lung tumors and tumor-like lesions
- 6 Squamous, large cell, and sarcomatoid carcinomas
- 7 Adenocarcinoma
- 8 Neuroendocrine neoplasms
- 9 Uncommon primary neoplasms
- 10 Metastatic and secondary neoplasms
- 11 Anterior mediastinum
- 12 Middle and posterior mediastinum
- 13 Role of ancillary studies
- Index
Summary
History of respiratory cytopathology
Application of the cytologic method to specifically examine respiratory specimens was used first in Europe by the mid-1800s, though exfoliated epithelial cells were described as early as the 18th century. Hampeln’s 1897 paper is credited with the first thorough description of normal and non-malignant cellular elements seen in sputum. And, about two decades later, his was one of the first publications to document the use of sputum cytology to diagnose pulmonary carcinoma in a series of 25 cases rather than a single report. Only sporadic and limited publications of respiratory cytology occurred in the early decades of the 20th century. A 3-year study of sputum cytology that culminated in a 1944 publication is considered as one of the most important contributions to clinical cytology of chest diseases in the first half of the 20th century. Nonetheless, it was only with the 1943 seminal publication by Papanicolaou and Traut that a major impetus to apply clinical exfoliative cytology to a variety of body sites really resulted in a renaissance of respiratory tract cytology. The consequence was a profusion of papers (only a handful referenced here) by the early 1950s concentrating in particular on the application of cytology to diagnose various forms of bronchogenic carcinoma, but also documenting the advantages that respiratory cytopathology offered in the recognition of fungal, parasitic, and viral diseases.
Optimal design of the rigid bronchoscope occurred in 1904 when Jackson added a suction channel and a light to its distal end. It was used primarily for removing purulent secretions from the airways, and was the only instrument capable of examining the lower airway up to the late 1960s. However, the exceptional technical skill required to perform needle aspiration with this instrument led to its limited use. The flexible fiberoptic bronchoscope was first introduced by Ikeda et al. With this technical advance, physicians could now visualize and sample segmental and subsegmental bronchi of all lobes, and obtain samples from infants and children. By 1973 its use had become widespread. The flexible bronchoscope allows for passage of brushes, biopsy forceps, and needles through their lumens for diagnostic sampling, and has few complications. Therefore, fiberoptic bronchoscopy ushered in the most common form of cytologic sampling of the respiratory tract in use today.
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- Lung and Mediastinum Cytohistology , pp. 1 - 20Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2000
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