Best Pathologist in Deakin
Dr Jason Gluch
Pathologist
Dr Elisabeth Amyes
Pathologist
resident training at the Canberra hospital, she commenced training in anatomical pathology in 2013. Elisabeth spent her training time at Gosford hospital for one year, and in our sister laboratory, Douglass Hanly Moir, in Sydney for four years.
Dr Natalie Dixon
Pathologist
2004 and subsequently completed her training in anatomical pathology at the Princess Alexandra Hospital in 2011. She commenced as a consultant pathologist for Sullivan Nicolaides Pathology in mid-2013 and became the Pathologist-in-Charge of the SNP Cairns laboratory in late-2016. A position she held until joining Capital Pathology in August 2021.
Dr Tracey Lu
Pathologist
degree from Fujian Medical University, China in 1986 and worked there when she graduated as a full-time assistant lecturer, researcher and clinical anatomical pathologist for six years before immigrating to New Zealand.
Dr Sumi Ranjit
Pathologist
in India and the UK, obtaining her Diploma in Child Health (DCH) and becoming a Member of the Royal College of Physicians (UK) in 1992. After working in Paediatrics and Paediatric Haematology for eight years in the UK, she moved to Australia in 1999 where she worked as a Registrar in Paediatric and Adult Haematology at Prince of Wales Hospital in Sydney.
Dr Melissa Robbie
Pathologist
training at Queen Victoria Hospital (later Monash Medical Centre), where she entered the Pathology training program. This was followed by further registrar positions at Monash Medical Centre and Dandenong District Hospital. She received her fellowship from the Australian Royal College of Pathologists in 1991 and had her first consultant appointment in the General Pathology Service at Ballarat Base Hospital.
What is pathology?
Pathology as a medical-diagnostic specialty (specialist training) is traditionally operated in the form of a pathobiology for methodological reasons . It deals mainly with the morphologically detectable pathological changes in the body. As such, it consists in a scientific and body-related disease research and pathology . Routine pathological and autopsy diagnostics are primarily based on the assessment of the macroscopic (pathological anatomy ) and light microscopic aspects (histopathology, cytology) of tissues, as well as in the course of scientific and technical progress increasingly with the inclusion of biochemical and molecular biological methods (e.g. detection of changed enzyme activities or changed protein expression with e.g. immunofluorescence or immunohistochemistry ). In research also plays electron microscopy (ultrastructural pathology) a role.
Naturally, procedures and processes that can only be observed or measured in living things (organ function, subjective complaints of the patient, functional complaints without a tangible organic correlate) elude the pathologist. Then the questions of the clinically active doctor to the pathologist are directed.
According to the introductory definition and in a broader sense, the term pathology or the prefix is used throughout medicine for pathological or abnormal findings and processes, for example one speaks of a pathological or of psychopathology as the doctrine of the pathological changes in the soul.
What do pathologists really do?
The corpse is already in pathology A permanent mistake by crime writers!Murder victims, for example, belong in forensic medicine or forensic medicine, not in. Not only do many scriptwriters not know this, but also a large part of the population: Only forensic medicine or forensic medicine doctors are involved in solving unnatural deaths.
Today the pathologist works mainly at the microscope , under which he examines sections from diseased tissues. As the dissection activity of the pathologist has decreased, his diagnostic clinical work for patients has come to the fore and now constitutes at least 95% of his work. As a so-called cross-sectional discipline, pathology is a central, clinically-oriented subject. As a specialist, the pathologist works closely with clinicians or doctors in private practice in order to discover diseases at an early stage (prophylaxis), to recognize them when they break out (diagnostics) and to monitor their progress during therapy.
The main tasks are
the macroscopic and microscopic findings of surgical specimens (resected specimens) or of small pieces of tissue that are removed as part of reflections (biopsies)
the microscopic patterning of cells and cell aggregates from body fluids or surfaces on cancer cells or their precursors ( cytologies ).
intraoperative rapid section diagnostics and
the clinical autopsy to clarify clinically unclear diseases and the success failure of a treatment.
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