Merced:
Processing and embedding tissues manually is still done occasionally here in 
the US and specially abroad. As a matter of fact 2% us US labs and 14% of 
foreign labs routinely manually process their tissues.
 
It implies running the tissues through all the dehydration, clearing and 
infiltration steps to finally prepare the blocks, also manually, using melted 
paraffin and dispensed in paper molds, or using Leuckhart rectangles. 
The description would be very long for an e-mail, so my advise is to get a 
histotechnique book, like Bolles-Lee's "Microtomist Vade-Mecum", or Peter 
Gray's "The Microtomist's formulary and guide", both are for sale at 
Amazon.com/books or you may find a copy at the University of Buffalo.
René J.

--- On Tue, 9/9/08, Merced Leiker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

From: Merced Leiker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [Histonet] Manual Paraffin Embedding
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Date: Tuesday, September 9, 2008, 4:54 PM

Does anyone process and embed tissues manually instead of using automated 
and expensive equipment?  Can you tell me how you do it?  Thanks.

Merced


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