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Kenneth P. Batts

Mayo Clinic

Publishes on Celiac Disease Research and Management, Liver Diseases and Immunity, Hepatocellular Carcinoma Treatment and Prognosis. 4 papers and 1.2k citations.

4Publications
1.2kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

An Update on Terminology and Reporting
Kenneth P. Batts, Jürgen Ludwig|The American Journal of Surgical Pathology|1995
Cited by 1.1k

The terms chronic active hepatitis (CAH), chronic persistent hepatitis (CpH), and chronic lobular hepatitis (CLH) have become obsolete, and their use without further specifications should be discontinued. This recommendation has become necessary because these names have changed from descriptive terms, intended for grading, to terms that are used either as morphologic diagnoses or disease designations or both, depending on individual preferences. Because this practice has caused serious misunderstandings, many authors and two international groups have recommended the use of a clear etiologic terminology. For the reporting practice of pathologists, we recommend that the pathologist routinely sign out biopsy samples with features of chronic hepatitis by indicating etiology, grade, and stage. An example would be autoimmune hepatitis, severe, stage 3. The stage in this case would indicate the presence of well-developed septal fibrosis but no nodular regeneration. Obviously, for the etiologic diagnosis, morphologic findings must be integrated with clinical and laboratory data. If this information is not available, clear morphologic diagnoses should be reported. Thus, instead of CPH, the diagnosis should be portal hepatitis, cause undetermined. This reporting practice eliminates ambiguous terminology and avoids the risk of inappropriate treatment as might occur, for example, when a term such as CAH is used to describe Wilson's disease and is misunderstood to mean autoimmune hepatitis. For a transitional period and to facilitate relearning, the terms CAH, CPH, and CLH can be reported in parentheses behind the etiologic diagnosis.

Mosaic Pattern of Hepatocellular Carcinoma: Histologic Basis for a Characteristic CT Appearance
Wendy Stevens, Samuel P. Gulino, Kenneth P. Batts et al.|Journal of Computer Assisted Tomography|1996
Cited by 78

PURPOSE: The mosaic pattern is a characteristic CT appearance for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). This study was designed to assess the tissue composition responsible for the CT mosaic pattern. METHOD: Gross and whole-mount histologic sections of 10 HCC tumors from eight patients were prepared at identical levels as preoperative CT sections. CT features of the mosaic tumor pattern were spatially registered with the corresponding pathologic sections. RESULTS: CT of mosaic HCC demonstrated enhancing nodules (9/10), low attenuation areas (9/10), and internal septa (3/10). Spatial registration of CT and microscopic sections showed that enhancing tissue was viable tumor in nine of nine. Low attenuation areas were either necrotic (4/9) or of mixed tissue (5/9), including areas of necrosis, fibrosis, and hemorrhage. CONCLUSION: The variable tissue composition of HCC accounts for the mosaic CT pattern. In most patients, enhancing nodules indicate viable tumor cells, and low attenuation areas represent necrosis, fibrosis, or hemorrhage.