Objective To discuss the clinical value of whole spine magnetic resonance imaging (WSMRI) in practice of neurosurgical spinal surgery. Method A total of 70 cases examined using WSMRI between January 2015 and December 2016 were collected and analyzed retrospectively. Results All patients got clear images of WSMRI. Eighteen cases got important information, including spinal variation (1 case), multiple lesions (3 cases), combined lesions (6 cases) and large range multi-segmental lesions (8 cases), which were missed by single-segment MRI . Conclusions WSMRI can show all the spine, spinal cord and surrounding tissue in one image at one time. It has high clinical value because of its accurate positioning, comprehensiveness, time saving, and low rate of misdiagnosis and missed diagnosis.
Objective To investigate inter-observer reproducibility in the pathologic diagnosis of breast intraductal proliferative lesions (BDPL). Methods Forty three BDPL patients were diagnosed by criterion of Page. Every specimen from each case was sorted randomly. All slides were classified as mild usual hyperplasia, moderate-severe usual hyperplasia, mild atypical hyperplasia, moderate-severe atypical hyperplasia, ductal carcinoma in situ, or ductal carcinoma in situ with invasion. Inter-observer agreement of the two groups was statistically analyzed using Kappa test. Then we compared all the diagnoses of individual pathologist with the consensus opinion confirmed by two breast pathologists to analyze the diagnostic accuracy and undue diagnosis. Results Inter-observer reproducibility of the trial group was higher than that of the control group (The total K value of 6, 3, and 2 diagnoses in the two groups were 0.289 3, 0.337 1, 0.492 8, 0.100 3, 0.150 3 and 0.340 3, respectively). When the categories were simplified, inter-observer reproducibility increased. There were still undue diagnoses of different degrees among pathologists of the trial group. Conclusion Using the same criteria is an important method to increase the diagnostic reproducibility and accuracy. More practice is needed to familiarize with these criteria.