I refused colonoscopy due to the risk of injury. Medicare won't pay for virtual colonoscopy so I went with barium enema which found absolutely nothing. I'm 70. Is it common for someone my age to have nothing at all found on that type of test.
Thanks a lot for the video ! I got a question, are epiploic appendages part of the subserosa as it it covered by peritoneum ? As we see on the left picture at 5:15
To be more precise, my question is : is the serosa covering epiploic appendage visceral serosa ? If I cut a tumor and see it invade epiploic fat is it still a pT3 ?
@@pablooa6577 Yes, the epiploic appendages are covered by visceral peritoneum/serosa. If the tumor is invading into the epiploic fat then it would be a pT3 but if the tumor extends and invades through the visceral peritoneum covering the epiploic appendages it would be a pT4. Hope that helps!
OMG thank you so much for this video. I am currently in PathA school and after watching your video I understand what I am supposed to be doing.
thank you very much for the explanations. you deserve more viewers, keep doing videos please, they will come. Kind regards from Germany
Hi, can you please do a video grossing lungs? Thank you! Your videos are super helpful
Thank you for explaining radial margin!! So confused the entire time in class trying to understand that
I refused colonoscopy due to the risk of injury. Medicare won't pay for virtual colonoscopy so I went with barium enema which found absolutely nothing. I'm 70. Is it common for someone my age to have nothing at all found on that type of test.
Thanks a lot for the video !
I got a question, are epiploic appendages part of the subserosa as it it covered by peritoneum ? As we see on the left picture at 5:15
To be more precise, my question is : is the serosa covering epiploic appendage visceral serosa ?
If I cut a tumor and see it invade epiploic fat is it still a pT3 ?
@@pablooa6577 Yes, the epiploic appendages are covered by visceral peritoneum/serosa. If the tumor is invading into the epiploic fat then it would be a pT3 but if the tumor extends and invades through the visceral peritoneum covering the epiploic appendages it would be a pT4. Hope that helps!
@@surgpathpa thank you !!