Hi Kathleen, Several years and a couple employers ago we attached small 
biopsies (for proper orientation) to small squares of cucumber (which had been 
dehydrated in several changes of alcohol) with a egg-albumin/glycerol mixture. 
The bx/cucumber unit was embedded together after processing and cut and stained 
as a unit with no adverse effects. Tom Truscott

-----Original Message-----
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu 
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of 
kgrob...@rci.rutgers.edu
Sent: Wednesday, May 29, 2013 11:14 AM
To: histonet
Subject: [Histonet] Processing thin slices of mouse cerebellum

To all,

We have these very thin slices of mouse cerebellum that need to be processed 
into paraffin.  The problem is that they need to be kept flat. 
We have tried sponges, but some of the slices are so small that they shrink 
(processed with our biopsy program, of course; if you want details, let me 
know) and get lost in the holes of the sponges.  We have biopsy cassettes, but 
the slices will still tumble and not stay flat. We have processed other things 
in lens paper, but I had to scrape the tissue with the paraffin into the mold.  
I have not tried Histogel, though-maybe embed the slices flat in that first and 
then process it?  Is there anything else?


Thanks so much!

Kathleen



Principal Lab Technician
Neurotoxicology Labs
Molecular Pathology Facility Core
Dept of Pharmacology & Toxicology
Rutgers, the State University of NJ
41 B Gordon Road
Piscataway, NJ 08854
(848) 445-1443
FAX (732) 445-6905

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