Nuclear pseudoinclusions
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Nuclear pseudoinclusions, also nuclear inclusions, are things that are found in a number of places.
Tumours:
- Papillary thyroid carcinoma.
- Medullary thyroid carcinoma.[1]
- Melanoma.
- Adenocarcinoma of the lung.
- Meningioma.[2][3]
Benign:
See also
References
- ↑ URL: http://www.papsociety.org/guidelines/Morphologic%20criteria.doc. Accessed on: 28 April 2010.
- ↑ URL: http://moon.ouhsc.edu/kfung/jty1/neurotest/Q51-Ans.htm. Accessed on: 25 October 2010.
- ↑ Perry, Arie; Brat, Daniel J. (2010). Practical Surgical Neuropathology: A Diagnostic Approach: A Volume in the Pattern Recognition series (1st ed.). Churchill Livingstone. pp. 194. ISBN 978-0443069826.
- ↑ Arias-Stella, J. (Jan 2002). "The Arias-Stella reaction: facts and fancies four decades after.". Adv Anat Pathol 9 (1): 12-23. PMID 11756756.
- ↑ Dardi, LE.; Ariano, L.; Ariano, MC.; Gould, VE. (1982). "Arias-Stella reaction with prominent nuclear pseudoinclusions simulating herpetic endometritis.". Diagn Gynecol Obstet 4 (2): 127-32. PMID 6284466.