1.Review of the results of cervical cancer mass screening during the last 10 years.
Jun YAMAGUCHI ; Yukie WAKAHARA ; Naomi KOIZUMI ; Satoshi TOKOYAMA ; Hiroe TAMURA ; Masaki SHIOZAKI ; Isao KAWAGUCHI ; Tsugio TERAI ; Shinjuro KUROSHIMA
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 1994;43(1):8-12
From April 1983 through March 1993, 10, 767 women underwent health examinations at the Health Care Center in Obihiro Kosei Hospital. Cervical smears were taken from theuterine cervix for cervical cancer screening. One hundred and six women had abnormal results, greater than class III. Those patients who were diagnosed as having carcinoma numbered 10 (0.09%). Of the cervical carcinomas found, 1 was frankly invasive (adenocarcinoma Ib); 3, microinvasive (2; squamous cell carcinoma and 1; co-existence of adenocarcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma); and 6, carcinomas in situ (squamous cell carcinoma).
2.Studies on asymptomatic microhematuria observed in health care center of Obihiro Kosei hospital.
Jun YAMAGUCHI ; Yukie WAKAHARA ; Naomi KOIZUMI ; Masaki SHIOZAKI ; Hiroe TAMURA ; Yukie MARUKO ; Satoko III ; Hiroko KAWAI ; Takashi YOSHIKAWA ; Tsugio TERAI ; Osamu ISHIMARU ; Kaname AMEDA ; Kazushi HIRAKAWA ; Toshiaki GOTOU ; Shigeo SAKASHITA
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 1989;38(1):30-33
From January 1981 through December 1986, 27, 513 individuals consisting of 17, 918 males and 9, 595 females underwent health examinations at Health Care Center in Obihiro Kosei Hospital. 14.2% of healthy and asymptomatic men and 29.1% of healthy and asymptomatic women had microscopic hematuria (one or more RBCs per HPF).
To evaluate the clinical significance of microhematuria, about one third of patients with asymptomatic microhematuria who had undergone complete urological examination were reviewed.
Genitourinary neoplasms were found in 0.21%(8 bladder cancers, 2 prostatic cancers and 1 renal cell cancer). The incidence of cancers increases proportionate to increase in age, furthermore, lesions were found more commonly in men than in women. We could find no relationship between the degree of hematuria and the cause. The results suggest that patients with asymptomatic microhematuria should undergo urological examinations.