Subscriber Login Students | Administrators
Online compliance and continuing education courses for clinical laboratories

Metastatic Information and Courses from MediaLab, Inc.

These are the MediaLab courses that cover Metastatic and links to relevant pages within the course.

Learn more about laboratory continuing education for medical technologists to earn CE credit for AMT, ASCP, NCA, and state license renewal and recertification. Or get information about laboratory safety and compliance courses that deliver cost-effective OSHA safety training and continuing education to your laboratory's employees.

Laboratories Individuals

Current Topics in Clinical Microbiology
Review 1

Lorimer JW. Eidus LB.: Invasive Clostridium septicum infection in association with colorectal carcinoma. Canadian Journal of Surgery. 37:245-9, 1994The association between invasive Clostridium septicum infection and colorectal carcinoma is examined by the presentation of three cases and a review of the literature.In the first two cases the patients presented with nontraumatic metastatic clostridial gas gangrene.In the third case a patient with chemotherapy-induced myelosuppression from concomitant multiple myeloma had a necrotizing transmural infection of the right colon.The apparent portal of entry of Clostridium septicum was an occult carcinoma of the ascending colon. The increasing evidence for a strong link between this organism and some cases of neutropenic enterocolitis is reviewed.

View Page
Review 3

Kornbluth AA. Danzig JB. Bernstein LH.: Clostridium septicum infection and associated malignancy. Report of 2 cases and review of the literature. Medicine. 68(1):30-7, 1989We report 2 patients with myonecrosis due to Clostridium septicum and associated colon carcinoma and have reviewed the English language literature for all reported cases of atraumatic C. septicum infection. A total of 162 cases of C. septicum infection have been reported.Eighty-one percent of these patients had an associated malignancy. Thirty-four percent of all patients had associated colon carcinoma, while 40% had a hematologic malignancy. Thirty-seven percent of reported patients had an occult malignancy at the time of their infection with C. septicum. In many patients, the portal of entry was found in the large intestine.In a particularly lethal form (79% mortality) of C. septicum infection, known as "distant myonecrosis," infection metastatic from the initial site of infection causes severe myonecrosis, gangrene, and often death within hours of clinical detection. Overall, survival of patients with C. septicum infection is only 35%.Review of all cases of C. septicum infection suggests several conclusions. 1) Patients with malignancy, particularly colonic or hematologic, and patients with cyclic neutropenia who develop signs and symptoms of sepsis, especially with associated findings of abdominal pain or pain in an extremity, should be treated for possible clostridial infection. 2) C. septicum infection does not appear to be a result of a single specific defect in either humoral or cell-mediated immunity. Rather, it may occur in patients who are granulocytopenic and therefore prone to an enterocolitis. 3) Patients in whom an infection with C. septicum is found must undergo a vigorous search for malignancy following ac

View Page

Introduction to Bone Marrow
Advantages of a Biopsy Specimen

Examining the biopsy allows the structure of the marrow to be viewed as it exists in the body. It provides essential diagnostic information in conditions that disrupt the normal architecture, such as metastatic carcinoma, myelofibrosis, Hodgkin's lymphoma and granuloma. A biopsy may also be used to evaluate cellularity and identify acid-fast bacteria or fungi in less time than is needed for routine culture methods. One disadvantage of the tissue sections prepared from the biopsy sample is that morphologic detail is lost. For this reason, in many cases imprint slides or smears from the aspirated sample are also examined.

View Page
Collection of Bone Marrow Biopsy

A bone marrow biopsy involves removing a small portion of the bone marrow without destroying the architecture of the marrow. This type of biopsy is necessary when the marrow cannot be aspirated (dry tap) due to a disease process, and also provides additional information complementary to that derived from the aspirate: biopsy specimens are more accurate for assessing cellularity, and infiltrative processes, such as metastatic carcinoma, fibrosis, amyloid, and lymphoma. A biopsy specimen is processed as follows: touch preparation tissue section

View Page

Red Cell Disorders: Peripheral Blood Clues to Nonneoplastic Conditions
The nucleated red blood cell and myelocyte photographed here were found on scanning of a peripheral blood smear. In context they are suggestive of metastatic carcinoma to the bone marrow.View Page
Leukoerythroblastosis

Illustrated in this field is a normoblast and a myelocyte, representing leukoerythroblastosis, a term associated with the release of immature cells from a disrupted marrow. Metastatic disease in the bone marrow, particularly in patients with primary breast or prostate cancer, is usually the culprit. Leukoerythroblastosis in the absence of anemia or thrombocytopenia is a signal to search for cancer metastic to the marrow. Nucleated RBCs were not identified on the blood smear seen here but were detected by an automated analyzer.The mortality rate of elderly patients with increased NRBCs, especially following accidents or general surgery, is greater.

View Page

White Cell and Platelet Disorders: Peripheral Blood Clues to Nonneoplastic Conditions
Match the letter representing the cell type with the condition in which increased numbers of the cell may be found in the peripheral smear.View Page
A peripheral blood smear illustrated by this photograph is highly suggestive of metastatic carcinoma.View Page
The peripheral blood smear noted in the photograph was held for morophological and clinical review as the total platelet count was 10,000/cumm. Conditions fitting this picture include:View Page


MediaLab, Inc.

http://www.MediaLabInc.net    |    (877) 776-8460 (tollfree)    |    sales@medialabinc.net