Healthcare Team
Pathologists
The
Pathologist is a medical doctor, a highly trained medical specialist who
examines tissues and is responsible for the accuracy of laboratory tests.
The pathologist is often called as a consultant during an operation to
make a diagnosis on a frozen section prepared specimen.
The pathologist uses diagnostic and screening tests to identify and interpret the changes
that characterize different diseases in the cells, tissues, and fluids of the body. Anatomic
pathologists analyze the gross and microscopic structural changes caused by disease in
tissues and cells removed during surgery or the autopsy. Cytopathology, the
examination of individual cells to aid in disease detection, is an important component of
modern patient care.
Partially adapted from the The
Intersociety Committee on Pathology Information, Inc.(ICPI) brochure
"Pathology as a Career in Medicine"
Pathologists' Assistants
Pathologists' Assistants (PAs) have practiced at The Ottawa Hospital
(TOH) for the past 29 years. There are nine PAs employed whose primary
responsibility includes the performance of the Gross Description of over
90% of the more than 40,000 surgical cases received annually (Pathology
Residents do the remainder).
At least 80% of the approximately 200 medical autopsies are performed
by PAs; assisting the Pathologist in the writing of Clinical Histories,
the dissection and blocking of the organs and the creation of a preliminary
report. PAs are also involved, working closely with the forensic Pathologist
to a varying extent, in the performance of forensic autopsies, of which
there are over 600 annually at the Eastern Ontario Regional Forensic Pathology
Unit, housed at the General Campus.
The PAs' responsibilities also include gross photography and maintenance of image
archives. PAs are active participants in the training of medical Residents as well as other
hospital paramedical staff. PAs amend and maintain policy and procedure manuals in
their areas as well as create quality assurance initiatives and continuing quality
improvement methodology.
Cytotechnologists
Cytotechnologists attend fine-needle-aspiration biopsies of lesions deep in the body and
assist the physician by immediately viewing the specimen in a microscope. See our
Cytopathology page for more information.
Histotechnologists
Histotechnologists are Medical Laboratory Technologists (MLT). They receive the
cassettes from the pathologists' assistants, fix the tissue through a series of chemicals,
the tissue is orientated in paraffin wax and then fine slices are placed on glass slides
and stained. Histotechnologists perform a variety of interesting duties such as: snap-
freeze tissue in the operating room so the Pathologist can assist the surgeon; use
immunohistochemical and immunoflourescent identification of cell markers; apply special
stains, process tissue for electron microscopy, do research, and utilize special handling
techniques for such tissue as kidney and lymph node biopsies.
Morgue Attendants and Pathologists' Assistants
The morgue attendants and pathologists' assistants help the pathologist with post-
mortem examinations (i.e. Autopsy) in order to obtain important autopsy tissue. Autopsy
tissue and surgical tissue from the physician is described and sampled by the
pathologist or pathologists' assistant in the Cutting Room. The sample tissue is placed in
a small plastic container called a cassette. Pathologists' assistants and morgue
attendants are continually challenged and fascinated with the variety of surgical
specimens as well as forensic and medical autopsies.
Office Staff and/or Technicians
Office staff and /or technicians receive or collect specimens and requisitions
from physicians and the requisition information is entered in the computer.
Specimens requiring the study of individual cells are sent to cytology
for processing by technicians and/or cytotechnologists. The pathologist
views prepared samples on a microscope and dictates an interpretation
of the findings, which is typed by transcriptionists in the office and
a report is sent back to the physician.
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