<p class="Abstract">This study aims to evaluate the histopathological analysis as well as the effect of coronary endarterectomy with severe calcified coronary artery disease. During the year of 2015 to 2017, a total of 135 patients (56 patients of stable angina and 79 patients of unstable angina) underwent atherectomy in adjunct to off-pump coronary artery bypass graft surgery. Histopathological study of atheroma specimen demonstrates the presence of calcification, foam cell, cholesterol clefts, thrombus, smooth muscle cell, and also necrotic tissue using standard hematoxylin and eosin stain techniques. However, smooth muscle cells and foam cell were identified with plaque using the monoclonal antibodies. Thrombus was more common in unstable angina group of patients (64.4%) in comparison to the patients with stable angina (23.2%). An accelerated progression pattern of smooth muscle cell proliferation and calcification were observed which was also common and significantly higher in unstable angina group of patients. The presence of thrombus and accelerated progressive pattern of smooth muscle cell proliferation in unstable angina patients imply the episodic disruption of atheromatous plaque followed by subsequent healing and may play a vital role in the pathophysiology of underlying angina pectoris.</p>
Background Segmentation of nuclei in cervical cytology pap smear images is a crucial stage in automated cervical cancer screening. The task itself is challenging due to the presence of cervical cells with spurious edges, overlapping cells, neutrophils, and artifacts. Methods After the initial preprocessing steps of adaptive thresholding, in our approach, the image passes through a convolution filter to filter out some noise. Then, contours from the resultant image are filtered by their distinctive contour properties followed by a nucleus size recovery procedure based on contour average intensity value. Results We evaluate our method on a public (benchmark) dataset collected from ISBI and also a private real dataset. The results show that our algorithm outperforms other state-of-the-art methods in nucleus segmentation on the ISBI dataset with a precision of 0.978 and recall of 0.933. A promising precision of 0.770 and a formidable recall of 0.886 on the private real dataset indicate that our algorithm can effectively detect and segment nuclei on real cervical cytology images. Tuning various parameters, the precision could be increased to as high as 0.949 with an acceptable decrease of recall to 0.759. Our method also managed an Aggregated Jaccard Index of 0.681 outperforming other state-of-the-art methods on the real dataset. Conclusion We have proposed a contour property-based approach for segmentation of nuclei. Our algorithm has several tunable parameters and is flexible enough to adapt to real practical scenarios and requirements.
Background: Although in vitro fertilization (IVF) has played a major role in the management of infertility, its failure rate is still 60-80% and most of the causes failure are unknown. Therefore, a histomorphology-based predictive tool to forecast IVF outcome that utilizes expression data of certain cellular adhesion molecules in endometrium pertaining to successful implantation might provide the theoretical basis to develop a low-cost laboratory investigation suited for low to middle income countries as opposed to the expensive gene expression based tools like endometrial receptivity array. In this study, mucin 1 (MUC1) and E-cadherin immunohistochemistry of endometrium from aspiring IVF women were analyzed to see if there is any correlation between signal intensities and endometrial receptivity in terms of IVF outcome. Methods: This was a case-control study conducted among women of reproductive age with infertility who underwent IVF at the Centre for Assisted Reproduction (CARe), Dhaka between March and December 2017. Endometrial biopsy samples were collected and routine histological as well as immunohistochemical analysis was performed on those samples at the Department of Pathology, Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujib Medical University (BSMMU), Dhaka. A total of 21 patients, 17 cases (IVF failure) and four controls (IVF success), were included in the study by consecutive convenient sampling. Relevant history and medical records of each of the patients were also obtained accordingly. Results: No statistically significant correlation was found between IVF outcomes and the signal intensities in endometrium produced by MUC1 and E-cadherin immunohistochemistry. Conclusions: Despite the fact that this study did not find any statistically significant correlation between endometrial immunohistochemistry of MUC1 and E-cadherin and IVF outcome, further studies may incorporate gene expression arrays to supplement or revise those findings.
Background. Non-Hodgkin lymphomas (NHLs) comprise a group of haematologic malignancies with different histologic subtypes. The clinical picture varies from indolent to aggressive presentation and nodal (lymphadenopathy) to extranodal (central nervous system, gastrointestinal, cutaneous plaque, or ulcer) involvement. Digital gangrene is seldom reported. Here, we describe a patient with pain and blackening of all fingers and toes as presenting symptoms of NHL. Case Presentation. A 32-year-old male weaver had been smoking three to five cannabis-containing cigarettes daily for about ten years and methamphetamine four to five tablets daily for five years. He had no history of Raynaud’s phenomenon, fever, cough, weight loss, skin rash, joint pain, and atherogenic or thrombogenic risk factors. We found normal blood pressure and absent peripheral pulses in arms and legs, dry gangrene of all fingers and toes, generalized lymphadenopathy, and hepatomegaly with ascites. The chest X-ray was normal, as were blood sugar, lipid profile, and hepatic and renal function. Rheumatoid factor, antinuclear and antiphospholipid antibodies, C-ANCA and P-ANCA, hepatitis B and C, and HIV were negative. CT abdomen revealed hepatosplenomegaly with multiple intra-abdominal lymphadenopathies. The peripheral angiogram showed 90-99% stenosis of radial and dorsalis pedis arteries with normal proximal vessels. Diagnosis of non-Hodgkin lymphoma was confirmed by histopathology of cervical lymph node (diffuse type), immunohistochemically subtyped as peripheral T cell lymphoma (not otherwise specified). The digital ischemia worsened despite cessation of cannabis and methamphetamine and starting CHOP (cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisolone) treatment, making amputation necessary. Conclusion. We present, to our knowledge, the first report of peripheral T cell lymphoma, NOS presenting with gangrene in all digits complicated by methamphetamine and cannabis abuse. This uncommon vascular manifestation of non-Hodgkin lymphoma may cause a diagnostic dilemma and delayed initiation of treatment.
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