Oral Pathology Clinical Pathologic Correlations Pdf Free Download
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Covering pathologic conditions by clinical appearance, Oral Pathology: Clinical Pathologic Correlations, 6th Edition uses an atlas-style format to help you identify, diagnose, and plan treatment for oral disease presentations. Two-page spreads include clinical photos of common conditions on one side while the facing page lists the central features, causes, and significance of each specific disease. Each chapter is organized by clinical appearance, such as white lesions, red-blue lesions, and cysts of the jaws and neck, and includes full-color photomicrographs and clinical photos to help you identify pathologic elements. This edition adds new coverage of oral cancer and new cone beam CT, regular CT, and MRI images. Expert authors Joseph Regezi, James Sciubba, and Richard Jordan provide a quick reference thatÕs ideal for the lab, NBDE review, or chairside use!
IgA nephropathy in children has various clinical manifestations. Kidney biopsy is a gold standard for diagnosis by using Oxford classification 2016 with few studies about the correlation between clinical and pathology manifestations. This study aims to find these correlations at the time of diagnosis and during short-term follow-up.
The variation in clinical symptoms of IgA nephropathy can provide a clue for renal pathology. Oxford classification 2016 [3] has been a reference point in our study. Our study showed that microscopic hematuria was strongly associated with mesangial hypercellularity which was indicated as an acute glomerular lesion. Moreover, hypertension is a prognostic factor for segmental glomerulosclerosis (S score). Similar result was also shown in previous study that the S score was associated with reduced eGFR and was higher MAP at the time of biopsy [13]. Severe pathological lesions (e.g., S, T, C) were associated with lower eGFR, higher blood pressure, and higher proteinuria, that were consistent with other findings. Glomerular hypertension may mediate progressive renal damage by leading to glomerular hyperfiltration and glomerular enlargement [14]. The previous study showed S lesion was associated with more proteinuria at presentation and more rapid decline in renal function [4]. In our study, tubular atrophy/interstitial fibrosis, and crescents lesions showed significant association with nephrotic range proteinuria in univariate Cox analysis, but it failed to attain independent significance in a multivariate model. As well as the crescent lesion was significantly associated with rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis and hypertension in univariate Cox analysis, but it was not in a multivariate model. 2b1af7f3a8