Hi,

Paraffin build-up should not be a common practice. I recall being told as a 
student decades ago, "The waterbath should be kept scrupulously clean". Some 
things are still true today and this is one of them. 

Does your waterbath have a glass insert? If so, simply wipe off all of the 
paraffin you can and then wipe off remaining debris with a small amount of 
xylene and wipe that off with alcohol. Then a quick wash in warm soapy water 
takes care of the rest. In a high-volume lab a quick wash in the lab dishwasher 
is perfect.

My waterbath has no insert...just a solid black finish and of course it cannot 
be submerged in water and xylene is out of the question. I just make sure there 
is no paraffin on the edges and if some happens to get stuck there in spite of 
my efforts then I use a small amount of alcohol on gauze and remove it. Then I 
rinse the waterbath in distilled  water, dry it out and then squirt a small 
amount of alcohol in it, swish it around and wipe it dry.


We also only use distilled water in our waterbath.


Jeanine Sanders
CDC Atlanta


  



-----Original Message-----
From: Garrey Faller [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Sunday, May 24, 2015 12:14 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [Histonet] Waterbath cleanliness

Hi everyone,

I am looking for a histotech procedure for keeping the water bath clean and for 
preventing cross contamination of patient specimens. I know one should use a 
kim wipe (or something similar) to clean the water surface of any ribbon debris 
between cases. However, should the top edge of the water bath be clean of all 
debris between every case?  Sometimes I see a mound-like build up of paraffin 
ribbon debris, and I am told that this is a normal practice while others say 
that it is not.
I'd like to modify my policy to say that there should be no debris on the water 
surface or on the hard top edge of the water bath in between cases.
Is this out of line? Is this what everyone practices?

Also, with the exception of rush type cases and perhaps large specimens, does 
everyone embed in numerical order and then cut in numerical order?

Thanks in advance for your help.

Garrey  Faller
Pathologist
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