Biomedical scientists are the foundation of modern healthcare, from cancer screening to diagnosing HIV, from blood transfusion for surgery to food poisoning and infection control. Without biomedical scientists the diagnosis of disease, the evaluation of the effectiveness of treatment, and research into the causes and cures of disease would not be possible. The Fundamentals of Biomedical Science series has been written to reflect the challenges of practicing biomedical science today. It draws together essential basic science with insights into laboratory practice to show how an understanding of the biology of disease is coupled to the analytical approaches that lead to diagnosis. Assuming only a minimum of prior knowledge, the series reviews the full range of disciplines to which a Biomedical Scientist may be exposed-from microbiology tocytopathology to transfusion science. Cytopathology provides a wide-ranging overview of the microscopic study of normal and abnormal cells, showing how current visualization methods are used to study cell structure, and how early detection of abnormal cell pathology can lead to timely clinical interventions.
Introduction: a glance at the past, a glimpse of the future; Preparation techniques; The cervical screening process; Normal cervical cytology; Abnormal cervical cytology; Quality issues in cervical screening and cytology; Diagnostic cytopathology; Cytology of urine; Serous effusions and peritoneal washings; Lower respiratory tract cytology; Fine needle aspiration cytology; Cytology of head and neck; Basic semen analysis; Cytology of the biliary tract and pancreas; Advances in cytopathology; Data analysis in cytopathology; Expertise in cytopathology;
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