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On the Outside Looking In
Doctors at UCI Medical Center are using a less invasive and more accurate approach to
diagnosing certain kinds of cancer. It is called Endoscopic Ultrasound-Guided Fine Needle
Aspiration, it combines endoscopic ultrasound and fine-needle aspiration in order to
visualize and biopsy tumors. |
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![[Dr. Kenneth Chang and Dr. Phuong Nguyen evaluating a patient by endoscopic ultrasound.]](img/photos/right-panel/chang-nguyen.jpg) |
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Dr. Kenneth Chang (L) and Dr. Phuong Nguyen evaluating a patient by endoscopic ultrasound. |
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The potential result: Tumor detection, biopsy and staging (determining the extent of the
tumor) that would have required more invasive methods via conventional surgery. Reduced pain
and recovery time. And considerable cost savings, since the procedure reveals whether
malignancies are too invasive for surgery to remedy.
Quite simply, it puts the physician's eyes and ears inside the patient without surgery.
A slender tube is inserted downward through the patient's mouth or upward through the rectum.
A microchip television camera embedded in the tip of the tube transmits crisp, clear images
to a television monitor.
Says Dr. Kenneth Chang, head of gastrointestinal oncology for the Chao Family Clinical
Cancer Research Center and developer of this emerging technique, "The addition of ultrasound
to the endoscope means that we can now see beyond the membranes that used to limit our view."
When endoscopic ultrasound is being used, a second TV monitors displays radar-like shadows
that are bounced-back sound waves. These images reveal both organs and lesions within those organs.
"Endoscopic Ultrasound-Guided Fine Needle Aspiration Quite simply, it puts the physician's
eyes and ears inside the patient without surgery."
A Steep Learning Curve
While endoscopic ultrasound is still in very limited use across the country, Dr. Chang is
already using it to enable an even newer method called fine-needle aspiration. Here, the
endoscope tube helps guide a biopsy needle that captures minuscule tissue samples for analysis.
Chang estimates that only about 150 hospitals are currently doing endoscopic ultrasound.
He adds, "Only about 75 are equipped to do fine needle aspiration and less than half of those
are actually doing successful needle biopsies." The bottleneck happens in the training.
Dr. Chang has already taught UCI's Dr. Phuong Nguyen the delicate procedure. He says,
"The needle is guided with great precision. It's not something that you can take a weekend
workshop and go do."
A master of understatement, Dr. Nguyen says, "You do have to know your anatomy." It seems
that deciphering the ultrasound images is quite a challenge, even for highly trained
physicians. It's like being in a long, winding tunnel and knowing at all times where north,
south, east and west are.
Dr. Chang refers to Dr. Nguyen as his "first clone" and is, with a sense of urgency,
teaching others his remarkable new technique.
UCI Medical Center is reinforcing its international lead in endoscopic ultrasonography
with the construction of an Interventional Endoscopy Center which will be opened later this year.
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