1964
DOI: 10.3109/00016486409121406
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Aspiration Biopsy of Salivary Gland Tumours:I. Correlation of Cytologic Reports from 652 Aspiration Biopsies with Clinical and Histologic Findings

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Cited by 121 publications
(54 citation statements)
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“…Classifying the salivary gland lesions into non-neoplastic, benign and malignant neoplasm may guide the clinician to make correct therapeutic decisions as to which patient requires further investigation, medical treatment or excision. 28 ADCC was the most common malignant tumor 2.4% in our study similar to other studies of Schoeman BJ et al and Eglis K et al 29,30 However, few more studies also document it to be the most common salivary gland tumor. Cytological features of salivary gland tumors can often overlap; hence the final diagnosis must always take into account cellular, stromal and clinical features into account.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 81%
“…Classifying the salivary gland lesions into non-neoplastic, benign and malignant neoplasm may guide the clinician to make correct therapeutic decisions as to which patient requires further investigation, medical treatment or excision. 28 ADCC was the most common malignant tumor 2.4% in our study similar to other studies of Schoeman BJ et al and Eglis K et al 29,30 However, few more studies also document it to be the most common salivary gland tumor. Cytological features of salivary gland tumors can often overlap; hence the final diagnosis must always take into account cellular, stromal and clinical features into account.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 81%
“…FNA provides beneficial preoperative information for help the clinician in deciding whether a particular patient should be managed surgically. Previous study reported that using FNA as an initial diagnostic tool have been able to reduce the number of operative procedures on salivary gland lesions approximately 30% (Qizilbash et al, 1985) and some patients do not receive invasive treatment (Mavec et al, 1964). The unsatisfactory specimens in this study was 5.2% which was relatively low as had been reported in the literatures (Cadillo, 1990;Layfield & Glasgow, 1991;Jayaram et al, 1994;Boccato et al, 1998;Tan & Koo, 2006;Mihashi et al, 2006, Jan et al, 2008, vary from 3% to 12%.…”
Section: 1583 Accuracy Of Fine Needle Aspiration Cytology Of Salivarmentioning
confidence: 45%
“…The sensitivity, specificity and accuracy of this method approach what was published previously in the literature when a traditional diagnostic approach was used. A comparison of the sensitivity, specificity and diagnostic accuracy of the pattern-based approach applied in our study with the studies that used the traditional diagnostic approach is shown in table 4 [12,16,23,24,25,26,27]. …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%