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USFS Forest Health Protection pathologist Angel Saavedra points to dying lower limbs on monkey puzzle tree. Araucaria araucana decline assistance trip to Chile, funded by International Programs.

 

Photo by: Beth Willhite

Date: March 16, 2017

 

Credit: USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection, Westside Forest Insect and Disease Service Center

Source: Beth Willhite collection; Sandy, Oregon.

 

Image provided by USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection: www.fs.usda.gov/main/r6/forest-grasslandhealth

The Right Path 2 (Courtesy of Sharon Wilczynski/Department of Pathology)

 

As technology advances, however, new tools allow pathologists to determine more subtle characteristics of a patient’s disease. For example, nearly all cervical cancers arise from human papillomavirus, or HPV, but the virus comes in many different strains. The two most common strains are HPV16 and HPV18. New laboratory techniques enable pathologists to determine if a cervical cancer was caused by HPV16 (top left) or HPV18. This type of insight one day may guide oncologists and patients in their treatment choices.

 

Image from "Beauty in the Beast," City News, Winter 2012 edition. Read and subscribe to City News at www.cityofhope.org/citynews.

Photo credit to Hilda Gomez, Plant Pathologist, Citrus Health Response Program, USDA APHIS PPQ

Maricelis Acevedo, an early career pathologist specializing in the use of host resistance for control of cereal rusts. Maricelis has screened wheat landraces from the USDA collection for stem rust resistance at the International screening nursery at Njoro Kenya for the past two years in order to identify new sources of resistance to the “Ug99” race and its variants.

Image of Doctor Juan Espejo, a pathologist working at Cottage Hospital.

 

File Name: N-C1350h

Date: circa 1973

Genre: Negative

Rights: No known copyright

Preferred Citation: Courtesy Galesburg Public Library Archives

 

Photos on Galesburg Public Library's Flickr page are low-resolution scans of photos for personal use. For high-resolution, or to get permission to publish, contact the archivist at archives@galesburglibrary.org or visit www.galesburglibrary.org

This series of sub-panels depicts the rotationally-invariant and mirror-symmetry invariant recognition performance of SIVQ in the predicate task of identifying a specific unique feature (a bee), in eight possible configurations.

 

Read more at:

 

www.uofmhealth.org/News/sivq_pathology_0200

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (April 1, 2021) - Hospitalman Ana Marcos, a laboratory technician at Naval Hospital Jacksonville, prepares patient samples for the centrifuge. Marcos, a native of Jacksonville, Florida, says, “As a laboratory technician, I watch for critical values in the samples, to help physicians understand what’s going on with their patients.” Naval Hospital Jacksonville’s laboratory has earned reaccreditation from the American Association of Blood Banks and the College of American Pathologists. (U.S. Navy photo by Deidre Smith, Naval Hospital Jacksonville/Released).

@Pathology2018 #Pathology #Cancer #epidemiology

#pathologists #pathologist #pathologyresidents #liverpath #gastropath #plant #breastpath #Histopath #Cytopath #surgicalpath #clinicalpath #digitalpath #neuropath #immunopath #SLPeeps #eyepath #nephropath

PS: pathology.euroscicon.com/

4th day of strike at the picket line

Pathologist Stefan Pambuccian, MD, FCAP and Eva M. Wojcik, MD, chair of Loyola's pathology department, during Loyola Medicine's 5th annual See, Test and Treat® event on September 7, 2019. The event offers same-day test results and access to health education resources. (Photo: Natalie Battaglia)

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