Journal of Clinical and Diagnostic Research (Oct 2014)

Squash Cytology in Neurosurgical Practice: A Useful Method in Resource-Limited Setting with Lack of Frozen Section Facility

  • Manish Agrawal,
  • Shiv Kumar Chandrakar,
  • Dharampal Lokwani,
  • Manju Raj Purohit

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7860/JCDR/2014/10142.4921
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 10
pp. FC09 – FC12

Abstract

Read online

Background: Intra-operative cytology is an important diagnostic tool. It has shown to play an important role especially in the diagnosis of central nervous system tumours. The study was done to assess the feasibility of squash cytology as standalone diagnostic test in setting where frozen section facility is not available. Materials and Methods: Total 48 patients with various intracranial lesions were initially enrolled in the study. Patients were investigated by various radio-imaging techniques and routine blood investigations. Forty-one patients were operated at Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose medical college, Jabalpur. Intra-operative squash cytology diagnosis was performed and was correlated with histology diagnosis as gold standard. Results: Out of 41 patients, inflammatory lesions were diagnosed in nine patients while benign lesions [most common neurilemmoma and meningioma] were observed in 21 and malignant lesions [astrocytoma was most common] were diagnosed in 11 patients. Diagnostic accuracy of intra-operative squash cytology irrespective of lesion & site was 95%. We were able to inform about the diagnosis to neurosurgeon in 15 minutes in all cases and within 12 minutes in >85% cases. Conclusion: Squash smear cytology is reliable and rapid standalone diagnostic method and it can assist for intraoperative decision-making diagnosis of intracranial lesions in resource-limited settings where frozen section facility is not available.

Keywords