Types of Cytology Specimens - Tiny Tells All
Cytopathology involves diagnosing diseases by examining individual cells or small cell clusters.
- Advantages: Rapid diagnosis, minimally invasive procedures, cost-effective.
- Limitations: Risk of sampling error, loss of tissue architecture details.
Specimen Categories:
| Feature | Exfoliative Cytology | Aspiration Cytology (FNA) |
|---|---|---|
| Definition | Study of cells shed spontaneously or mechanically. | Study of cells obtained by needle aspiration. |
| Subtypes | - Spontaneous (e.g., urine, sputum, effusions) - Mechanical (e.g., Pap smear, brushings) | Fine Needle Aspiration (FNA) |
| Common Sites | Cervix, bronchi, bladder, body cavities. | Thyroid, lymph nodes, breast, liver, lung. |
⭐ Cytology offers a rapid, minimally invasive, and cost-effective diagnostic approach, especially for cancer screening and diagnosis.
Exfoliative Cytology Collection - Surface Sleuthing
Exfoliative cytology involves collecting cells shed naturally or dislodged from surfaces. Key methods include:
| Site | Collection Method(s) | Common Fixative(s) |
|---|---|---|
| Gynaecological | Pap smear (Conventional, LBC) | 95% Ethanol, LBC-specific preservatives |
| Respiratory | Sputum, Bronchial washings/brushings, BAL | Saccomanno fixative (sputum), 95% Ethanol/Cytolyt |
| Urinary Tract | Voided urine (mid-stream, >30-50mL), Catheterized | Fresh (ideal), 50% Ethanol, Saccomanno |
| GIT | Brushings (endoscopic) | 95% Ethanol |
| Body Fluids | Pleural, Peritoneal, CSF (aspirates) | Fresh, Heparin (if bloody), 50% Ethanol |
⭐ Liquid-Based Cytology (LBC) for Pap smears significantly reduces obscuring elements like blood and mucus, improving sensitivity.
📌 Pap Smear Adequacy (Bethesda): Satisfactory? Cells (squamous >5000 LBC, 8000-12000 conv.), Endocervical/TZ component present, No obscuring factors (No Obscuring Blood, Inflammation, Mucus >75%).
FNAC: Procedure & Evaluation - Needle Ninjas
Fine Needle Aspiration Cytology (FNAC) is a key diagnostic tool.
- Indications: Palpable lesions (thyroid, breast, lymph nodes); deep lesions (USG/CT guided: liver, lung).
- Contraindications: Bleeding disorders, uncooperative patient.
- Technique:
- Needle: 22-27 gauge.
- Aspiration (syringe) or non-aspiration/capillary (Zajdela technique).
- Imaging guidance (USG/CT) for deep sites.
- ROSE (Rapid On-Site Evaluation): Assesses sample adequacy, ↑diagnostic yield.
⭐ Rapid On-Site Evaluation (ROSE) during FNAC dramatically increases sample adequacy and diagnostic yield, reducing the need for repeat procedures.
- Common Sites: Thyroid, lymph nodes, breast, salivary glands, liver, lung.
- Complications (Rare): Hematoma, pneumothorax (lung), infection.
Cytology Processing: Smears & Stains - Slide Stories
- Smear Techniques: Direct spread/pull-apart, crush (cellular samples), cytospin (fluid samples).
- Fixation:
- Wet Fix (e.g., 95% ethanol, methanol): For Pap stain; preserves nuclear detail.
- Air Drying: For MGG stain; preserves cytoplasmic/matrix features.
- Stains:
- Papanicolaou (Pap): Polychromatic. Excellent nuclear detail. 📌 HOG EAts (Hematoxylin, OG-6, EA-50).
- May-Grünwald Giemsa (MGG): Romanowsky. Good cytoplasmic & matrix detail.
- Cell Block: From sediment/fragments. For architecture, H&E, IHC, molecular studies.
| Feature | Papanicolaou (Pap) Stain | May-Grünwald Giemsa (MGG) Stain |
|---|---|---|
| Fixation | Wet (95% ethanol) | Air drying |
| Nuclear Detail | +++ (Excellent, crisp) | ++ (Good) |
| Cytoplasm | Transparent, differentiation | Opaque, granules |
| Primary Use | Cancer screening, nuclear morphology | Hematology, cytoplasmic detail |
⭐ The Papanicolaou (Pap) stain is a polychromatic stain ideal for assessing nuclear details and cytoplasmic differentiation, crucial for cancer diagnosis.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- FNAC: Rapid diagnosis with 22-25G needles; thinner for vascular, thicker for fibrotic.
- Fixation: 95% Ethanol for Pap (nuclear detail); air-dry for Romanowsky (cytoplasmic).
- Stains: Papanicolaou for nuclear; Romanowsky (Giemsa, MGG) for cytoplasmic/matrix.
- LBC: Cleaner smears, ↓ artifacts, allows ancillary tests (e.g., HPV DNA).
- Cell blocks: From FNAC/fluids, crucial for IHC and architecture.
- Adequacy: Essential (e.g., Bethesda thyroid: ≥6 groups, ≥10 cells each).
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