Concomitant presentation of histologically distinct bilateral testicular tumors is exceedingly rare. Here we report the case of a 20-year-old male who presented with a left testicular mass. He was found to have bilateral testicular masses on ultrasound and underwent bilateral orchiectomy. Left testicular pathology revealed a mixed germ cell tumor consisting of teratoma, seminoma, and germ cell neoplasia in situ; right testicular pathology revealed two foci of pure seminomas. He is currently on active surveillance and remains in remission at 18-month follow-up. Our case demonstrates the rare occurrence of bilateral primary synchronous testicular tumors with different histopathology in each testis. Despite the rarity of this condition, its treatment is based on standard management of unilateral testicular carcinoma, with the added element of prioritization of one tumor over the other. It is important for clinicians to tailor management for bilateral testicular germ cell tumors according to the most aggressive component.
Background: The study was undertaken to see the correlation between cervical cytology, histopathology and colposcopy in the diagnosis and management of various cervical lesions.Methods: It is a cross sectional study conducted at a tertiary care hospital in Mumbai, in the department of obstetrics and gynecology from February 2007 to March 2008. A total 55 sexually active women were enrolled for the study who belonged to age group greater than 20 years with history of chronic leucorrhoea or post-coital bleeding/spotting, intermenstrual bleeding/spotting or examination findings of erosion, an unhealthy cervix, a lesion bleeding on touch or an abnormal or suspicious Papanicolaou smear. These women then underwent cytology, colposcopy and cervical biopsy.Results: The accuracy of cytology when compared to colposcopy was 81.82%. The accuracy of colpo-histopathology was 83.6%. The combined accuracy was 76.36%.Conclusions: The simultaneous use of cytological studies and screening colposcopy has been shown to increase the cervical cancer detection. Colposcopy offers an excellent tool in the hands of a gynaecologist to evaluate the uterine cervix and it is not possible to develop this kind of perspective by any other method.
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