@TristanRutland7 Thanks for the great case. Are you familiar with these Meisner corpuscle -like bodies that keep popping up for me? I had one with a nearby schwannian hamartoma and I was wondering if anybody knew if they could be a related process
@The_Bar_With_JD@MLegiste Also… is that an X-ray of a female? How could the creatures arms be spread in such a way while compressed in a rectum? Highly dubious
@JulianBurton15 Huge fan of street art. It’s one of my favorite things about exploring a new city! It’s strange tho bc I really enjoy it but it seems to be a thing toward which most people feel indifferent
I just uploaded another video to my YouTube channel.
This video covers morphology of necrosis.
Again, any helpful comments or suggestions are appreciated.
Any ads on these videos is YouTube's doing, not mine 😀
Necrosis-morphology https://t.co/n3glkynQvl via @YouTube
@SPIG_KEMU @WKemp_MT_FPDoc Very classic (and classy, might I add) presentation of a post myocardial infarction aneurysm / rupture. That’s a really good picture, even the classic anterior wall unless I’ve got my anatomy messed up
@SPIG_KEMU @WKemp_MT_FPDoc Not an answer to your question - but there is another entity “Castleman disease” that has a classic association with “onion skinning” appearance. Cheers!
@JulianBurton15 Sometimes we build up our goodbyes and the reality doesn’t rival expectation. Usually people just feel awkward and don’t know how to say the right thing. I personally have carried a couple of hard goodbyes along for too long now. Congrats on that particular professional stint!
@HermelinMD@WKemp_MT_FPDoc Haha I’ll try. I don’t see a big inflammatory infiltrate in the tubules. Some tubular cells look they they aren’t doing so hot. I.e., condensed cytoplasm, altered nuclei. Some tubules have epithelium that are “lifting off” their attachment. Not frank ATN ie necrosis tho