We never ever allowed the residents to wrap anything. They were instructed to 
leave everything in the sample bottle and later the histotech decided what to 
do. If there were many small pieces we filtered the sample through a tissue 
paper and processed it folded. Sometimes we used empty tea bags with very good 
results.
René J.  


On Wednesday, August 13, 2014 11:25 AM, "Morken, Timothy" 
<timothy.mor...@ucsfmedctr.org> wrote:
  


All knowing Histonet,

Our grossing staff uses nylon "biopsy bags" to enclose some biopsy specimens. 
The embedding staff find them troublesome because when they pull the bags open 
they tend to "pop" open and throw the tissue off in all directions. They have 
to be very careful opening these. Is there another bag made of some other 
material that is less prone to this problem?

For various reasons some of these samples can't be put on sponges. They do wrap 
some in flat biopsy paper, but not others. It seems to be a grossing personal 
preference more than anything else.

Thanks for any and all info!

Tim Morken
Supervisor, Histology, Electron Microscopy and Neuromuscular Special Studies
UC San Francisco Medical Center
Box 1656
505 Parnassus Ave
San Francisco, CA 94143
USA

415.514-6042  (office)
tim.mor...@ucsfmedctr.org<mailto:tim.mor...@ucsfmedctr.org>


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