[Histonet] cutting MMA cross section of mouse femur

2014-12-10 Thread Dorothy Hu
Dear Histonetters,

I normally use 85/15 ratio of MMA/dibutyl phthalate (DP) in my mouse tibia
and femur longitudinal sections. But for cross section of mouse femur. Do
you change the ratio of MMA/DP to make block more soft or hard? It is
difficulty to get good cross sections. Any expert especially from hard
tissue committee, please help. I'm very much appreciated.

Dorothy Hu
MGH endocrine
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[Histonet] Difference Between Histotech Lead and Histology Supervisor Positions

2014-12-10 Thread Joseph Mecham
I am looking for some opinions on how everyone's individual labs view the Lead 
tech and Histology Supervisor positions.  Would love everyone's input.  I know 
NSH's salary scale shows a larger variance in pay between the two.

Thanks in advance!


Drew Mecham
Central Oregon Regional Pathology Services
1348 NE Cushing Drive
Bend, OR 97701
541.693.2651


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[Histonet] shelf life

2014-12-10 Thread Bitting, Angela K.
We are being inspected soon and I'm trying to check the labels on all of my 
chemicals.  How do I determine the expiration date of a 1N HCl solution I 
prepared in house.  I went on line and a commercially available 1N HCl solution 
has a 36 month shelf life according to the vendor's web site. I don't know how 
they arrived at that. I know concentrated HCl has an indefinite shelf life, but 
a 5 year retest date appears on the COA. It's confusing to me.
Any help would be appreciated.



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[Histonet] RE: shelf life

2014-12-10 Thread Morken, Timothy
Angela most of these shelf life dates are just the length of time a vendor is 
willing to be responsible for the reagent. It's mostly a financial decision, 
not chemical deterioration. They just don't want to be responsible for 
chemicals for too long. So that is why you see variations in shelf life or 
expiration dates for the same chemical from different vendors.

We generally give any solution we make up a 6-month shelf life unless we know 
from validations that is it is shorter. We make up solutions in amounts that 
will be used up before that date so we never have expired reagents around. 
That's easier than always having to inventory for expired reagents. 

To justify your dating you can use published dates from various vendors (ie, 
datasheets, expirations on the bottle, etc).

For chemicals that do not state expiration dates I actually asked the question 
and got a written reply (via their website) from Fisher that states liquid 
chemicals are good for 3 years and dry chemicals for 5 years unless stated on 
the bottle. I put that letter in our manual as documentation on how we arrived 
at our in-house expiration dating. 

Tim Morken
Supervisor, Histology, Electron Microscopy and Neuromuscular Special Studies
UC San Francisco Medical Center
San Francisco, CA

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-Original Message-
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu 
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Bitting, Angela 
K.
Sent: Wednesday, December 10, 2014 8:45 AM
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: [Histonet] shelf life

We are being inspected soon and I'm trying to check the labels on all of my 
chemicals.  How do I determine the expiration date of a 1N HCl solution I 
prepared in house.  I went on line and a commercially available 1N HCl solution 
has a 36 month shelf life according to the vendor's web site. I don't know how 
they arrived at that. I know concentrated HCl has an indefinite shelf life, but 
a 5 year retest date appears on the COA. It's confusing to me.
Any help would be appreciated.



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prohibited and may be unlawful. If you have received this message in error, 
please delete all electronic copies of this message (and the documents attached 
to it, if any), destroy any hard copies you may have created and notify me 
immediately by replying to this email. Thank you.

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Re: [Histonet] shelf life

2014-12-10 Thread Rene J Buesa
Expiration dates and not only confusing but very variable and inaccurate. I do 
not think you should worry about how the vendor determined the exp. date→maybe 
it is just greater than a competitor's just to lure you to buy theirs, who 
knows, but you can use their exp.date for yours.HCl absorbs water vapor if the 
container is not well capped, and that may be the over-reacting 
recommendation of testing is in 5 years, but it could be 4 years or 10 years 
depending in the environment humidity or the cap used.These regulations are 
something like the piggy banks, they make parents bank robbers and the 
exp.dates make histotechs liers.With experience you will be able to determine 
that some solutions weaken after some time lapse, use those known lapses as 
your exp.date for those solutions and expand to others.The inspectors, in 
their infinite wisdom want to read a date, regarldess of its accuracy. Their 
ego is saved by a written date.René J.  

 On Wednesday, December 10, 2014 11:46 AM, Bitting, Angela K. 
akbitt...@geisinger.edu wrote:
   

 We are being inspected soon and I'm trying to check the labels on all of my 
chemicals.  How do I determine the expiration date of a 1N HCl solution I 
prepared in house.  I went on line and a commercially available 1N HCl solution 
has a 36 month shelf life according to the vendor's web site. I don't know how 
they arrived at that. I know concentrated HCl has an indefinite shelf life, but 
a 5 year retest date appears on the COA. It's confusing to me.
Any help would be appreciated.



IMPORTANT WARNING: The information in this message (and the documents attached 
to it, if any) is confidential and may be legally privileged. It is intended 
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unauthorized. If you are not the intended recipient, any disclosure, copying, 
distribution or any action taken, or omitted to be taken, in reliance on it is 
prohibited and may be unlawful. If you have received this message in error, 
please delete all electronic copies of this message (and the documents attached 
to it, if any), destroy any hard copies you may have created and notify me 
immediately by replying to this email. Thank you.

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Health Information and other confidential data contained in external e-mail 
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[Histonet] Gomori Trichrome

2014-12-10 Thread Joanna

Hi, I was hoping you guys can help us with our problem with modified gomori 
trichrome stain for frozen muscle biopsy. We've been seeing a lot of red 
blotches on our slides. We've tried 3 different manufactures of chromatrope 2 R 
dyes, including changing our recipe. So far no success. 

Hopefully  you can give us some suggestions. 

Thanks. 

Neuropathology lab
Vancouver, Canada 



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