60 likes | 208 Views
Experience with TIES. Yang Liu, Ph.D. Department of Medicine/Division of Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition Department of Bioengineering. Research Interests. Develop novel optical microscopy techniques to improve the detection, surveillance and prevention of various cancers
E N D
Experience with TIES Yang Liu, Ph.D. Department of Medicine/Division of Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition Department of Bioengineering
Research Interests • Develop novel optical microscopy techniques to improve the detection, surveillance and prevention of various cancers • Develop super-resolution imaging techniques • Analyze the nanoscale cell architecture properties • Identify novel imaging-based “biomarkers” from cell/tissue specimens.
What we use TIES for? • Identify patients with specific concurrent pathological diagnosis (detection). • Identify patients with specific pathological diagnosis on follow-up procedures (prognosis).
What we like about TIES? • Provide us (basic scientists) convenient access to search and identify clinical tissue specimens based on patients’ pathology report. • Quickly identify patients with specific pathological characteristics (e.g., atypical lesions, malignancy, etc). • Convenience to review patients’ follow-up pathological report.
What we like TIES to improve? • An option to have individual patient-based, not individual report-based case to be saved. • Possibilities of including cytology report (cervical cytology, FNA). • Inclusion of hospital name (PHS, etc).