Difference between revisions of "Lymph node grossing"
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*Visual. | *Visual. | ||
*Palpation - more important than visual. | *Palpation - more important than visual. | ||
===Gross interpretation=== | |||
Normal lymph node: | |||
*Firm (relative to adipose tissue). | |||
*Glistening surface when cut. | |||
Pathologic lymph node: | |||
*White lesions, especially irregular = suggestive of carcinoma. | |||
*White, glistening, with lobulated surface - "fish flesh" = suggestive of lymphoma. | |||
**Subtle lobulation (~1 mm) on section suggestive of ''[[follicular lymphoma]]''.<ref>Bailey, D. 5 August 2010.</ref> | |||
===Submission=== | ===Submission=== | ||
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==See also== | ==See also== | ||
*[[Lymph nodes]]. | *[[Lymph nodes]]. | ||
==References== | |||
{{Reflist|1}} | |||
[[Category:Cancer staging]] | [[Category:Cancer staging]] |
Revision as of 18:32, 15 October 2023
Lymph node grossing is an important element of the lymph node assessment in cancer staging.
General
In many cancer types, the lymph node count is important to quantify, as it is used as a quality metric.
Cases with too few lymph nodes may be under-staged and thus under-treated.
Gross
Identification of lymph nodes
- Visual.
- Palpation - more important than visual.
Gross interpretation
Normal lymph node:
- Firm (relative to adipose tissue).
- Glistening surface when cut.
Pathologic lymph node:
- White lesions, especially irregular = suggestive of carcinoma.
- White, glistening, with lobulated surface - "fish flesh" = suggestive of lymphoma.
- Subtle lobulation (~1 mm) on section suggestive of follicular lymphoma.[1]
Submission
- The number of lymph nodes in the block should be noted in the gross report.
- If multiple lymph nodes are present in the one block they should not be section - unless inked.‡
‡ If multiple lymph nodes are sectioned and these are not marked: it is not possible to reliably count the number of positive lymph nodes. Example: two lymph nodes are bisected and two sections have a small amount of cancer. Is that two positive lymph nodes or one positive lymph node that was bisected?
See also
References
- ↑ Bailey, D. 5 August 2010.