The oddest things I cut were the honey bee and yellow jacket stingers.  I've 
done plant stamen, reptiles, fish and I believe another insect.  I usually tell 
the students that are working on a research project to give me a sample they 
don't care about so I can see if I can do what they want.

But I had oddities that I didn't have to section like during hunting season a 
hunter killed a deer and there was a mass on the trachea that he wanted tested 
to make sure the deer was okay to eat.  I got the sample and when I tried to 
gross it I found a very hard shiny silver object.  I told the pathologist whose 
case it was that the mass was from a bullet did he still want histo done. No.

The other interesting one was the egg shell.
The conversation went something like this.
Pathologist:  Can you section this egg shell
Me: No it's too hard.
P: Can't you decal it
M: That's not going to work.
P: Did you try.
M: No
P: Don't you think you should try first.
M: Okay fine but it is no going to work.

Put a piece of eggshell (made of calcium) into some decal solution (that 
removes calcium) and watch the egg shell bubble and disappear.  I did get to 
tell the pathologist "I told you so"

Roberta Horner
Penn State University
Animal Diagnostic Lab

-----Original Message-----
From: Morken, Timothy [mailto:timothy.mor...@ucsf.edu] 
Sent: Tuesday, January 06, 2015 2:24 PM
To: Patsy Ruegg; Roberta Horner; Douglas Gregg; Histonet@Lists. Edu
Subject: And other crazy stuff. RE: [Histonet] cutting honey bees

You crazy research people...OK, so what is the craziest thing you ever had to 
cut, or were asked to cut?

For me, not too bad, but embedding for EM and sectioning a single oocyte that 
was nearly microscopic. I'll just say it took a LOT of thick sections too face 
down to it without actually cutting through it.


Open the floodgates....

Tim Morken

-----Original Message-----
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu 
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Patsy Ruegg
Sent: Tuesday, January 06, 2015 11:13 AM
To: Roberta Horner; Douglas Gregg; Histonet@Lists. Edu
Subject: RE: [Histonet] cutting honey bees

for the whole bee I probably would process and embed it in glycol methacrylate 
(gma) it is much harder and would give better sections, we have done zebra fish 
and several other harder tissues including calcified bone in GMA.

Cheers,
Patsy

Patsy Ruegg, HT(ASCP)QIHC
Ruegg IHC Consulting
40864 E Arkansas Ave
Bennett, CO 80102
H 303-644-4538
C 720-281-5406
prueg...@hotmail.com



> From: r...@psu.edu
> To: classic...@gmail.com; histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
> Date: Sat, 3 Jan 2015 23:15:33 +0000
> Subject: RE: [Histonet] cutting honey bees
> CC: 
> 
> I sectioned and stained honey bee and yellow jacket stingers years ago.  They 
> wanted to show the difference between the stingers.  I wasn't sure what to do 
> so I processed and handled like everything else.  I was able to get some good 
> sections.  I put 6 stingers in each block and cut several sections figuring 
> there should be at least one good stinger in each block and it worked.
> Roberta Horner
> Penn State University
> Animal Diagnostic Lab
> ________________________________________
> From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
> [histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] on behalf of Douglas Gregg 
> [classic...@gmail.com]
> Sent: Saturday, January 03, 2015 6:08 PM
> To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
> Subject: [Histonet] cutting honey bees
> 
> Has anyone had experience embedding and cutting honey bees. I am sure 
> there are some issues with the harder exoskeleton. Would that have to 
> be dissected away first. I am considering helping a student with a 
> science fair project on bees.
> 
> Douglas Gregg
> Veterianary pathologist
> 
> _______________________________________________
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> Histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
> http://lists.utsouthwestern.edu/mailman/listinfo/histonet
> 
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