Brush used during liquid-based cytology screening to take cervical a sample, Hologic, 1990-2017

One white brush with thin brush tip used during liquid-based

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One white brush with thin brush tip used during liquid-based
Science Museum Group
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One white brush with thin brush tip used during liquid-based cytology screening to take cervical a sample, BD Sure Path, 1990-2017

Since 2008, liquid based cytology tests have been used in the United Kingdom to carry out a cervical screening test. Cells are removed from a person’s cervix using a special brush which is then rinsed into a small container of liquid and sent off with the brush head to a laboratory. Here the sample is added to a glass slide and examined.

Originally, samples were taken with a wood spatula and the sample smeared onto a glass slide which was then sent to the lab for examination. This was sometimes known as a Pap smear, after its developer by Dr Georges Papanicolaou (1833-1962). Although cervical screening has been available in England since the 1960s, only in 1988 was a centralised screening programme developed.

Since 2016, cervical screening in England is also used to detect HPV (human papillomavirus). Almost all cases of cervical cancer are caused by high-risk HPV. For a small number of people, their immune system will not be able to get rid of high-risk HPV. If left unmonitored or untreated the virus may cause cervical cancer.

Details

Category:
Clinical Diagnosis
Object Number:
2019-44/1
Materials:
plastic (unidentified)
Measurements:
overall: 188 mm
type:
brush
credit:
Gift of London Regional Cytology Training Centre