Good morning all,

Could someone with more knowledge in this matter than I have help shed a little 
light?

While at a nationally-renowned medical facility, I've come across something 
rather interesting (to me) for which no one in the immediate lab has a 
definitive answer for.

I see varying trimming(or grossing) techniques by the residents. I'm told that 
it's very common to have poorly grossed tissue submitted regularly whenever a 
new group comes through, but nothing is done to correct it.

It runs the gamut from non-decalcified bone, or humongous chunks of tissue that 
barely fits in the cassette but has to be nearly shoved into the mold, and 
tissue that's >5mm, seriously.

This time, it's prostate tissue. I've been places where maybe 3 or 4 sections 
were submitted from the area of interest and maybe a sample of normal tissue 
just for differentiation. But here, it's common to receive anywhere from 30 to 
50 cassettes from the same site. I'm guessing they don't want to discard ANY 
tissue. 

What's interesting is some of this is submitted as a bunch of very tiny slivers 
in some cassettes and then nickel and quarter-sized chunks from the same site 
in others.

Has anyone else seen prostate submitted this way? Is there a rhyme or reason 
that I'm not aware of?

Thanks

M


www.HistoCare.com
_______________________________________________
Histonet mailing list
Histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
http://lists.utsouthwestern.edu/mailman/listinfo/histonet

Reply via email to