Hello Gudrun,
Alcian blue for fast frozen sections
I was not aware that alcian blue would be routinely used on frozen sections of
transplant liver biopsies.
There are other staining techniques that contain a blue dye, that have been
used in liver biopsies including Masson's Trichrome (aniline bl
Paula,
What does the artefact look like?
Another cause could be partial lifting of parts of the section, allowing
reagents to become trapped under the section.
You commonly see it in thyroids where the colloid traps antibody and/or
detection reagents under the colloid giving a particulate brown
6
Fax: 612 9845 3318
Pathology Department
the children's hospital at westmead
Cnr Hawkesbury Road and Hainsworth Street, Westmead
Locked Bag 4001, Westmead NSW 2145, AUSTRALIA
From: jayalakshmy p.s
Sent: 12 April 2022 22:01
To: Tony Henwood (SCHN
Hi there,
I have had good results with Giemsa-like counterstaining (Stefanović et al
2013, Ravishankar et al 2016) :
Azure blue, when substituted for hematoxylin as a counterstain in immunostain
preparation, has been used to help differentiate melanocytes from melanophages.
Azure blue prefer
il.com]
Sent: Friday, 18 March 2022 12:45 AM
To: Tony Henwood (SCHN)
Subject: Re: [Histonet] Histonet Digest, Vol 220, Issue 8
Hello Henwood,
Thank you for the reply to my post with elaborate explanation and appropriate
references. We doubted about the validity of using after expiry date. We ke
Hi Jayalakshmy,
This our policy at the Kid's hospital in Sydney:
Validation of Expired Antibodies
Usually when a new concentrated antibody is received it will have an expiry
date of around 2 years from receipt but usually we can continue to use
antibodies well past this expiry date.
If the ant
I agree,
She will be missed
Regards
Tony Henwood JP, MSc, BAppSc, GradDipSysAnalys, CT(ASC), FFSc(RCPA)
Principal Scientist, the Children's Hospital at Westmead
Adjunct Fellow, School of Medicine, University of Western Sydney
Tel: 612 9845 3306
Fax: 612 9845 3318
Pathology Department
the childre
Hi Pam,
We have used the Milestone Tissue Safe Plus unit with Integrated Data Logger
card reader to seal formalin-fixed placentas (and other specimens if needed)
since 2019.
Placentas are drained of excess formalin in a chemical hood, placed into a
labelled bag and sealed.
So possibly for long
Hi Michelle,
We have used the Milestone Tissue Safe Plus unit with Integrated Data Logger
card reader to seal formalin-fixed placentas since 2019.
Placentas are drained of excess formalin in a chemical hood, placed into a
labelled bag and sealed.
We instituted the process to reduce the formalin
Hi Clay,
The first solution is methanol.
So lab grade methanol will do.
The blue colour is from an innocuous dye added to differentiate from water (and
ethanol used in cytology fixation). This helps us poor cytologists when we are
doing ROSE at FNAs.
Regards
Tony Henwood JP, MSc, BAppSc, GradD
I agree with Bryan,
The introduction of thiosemicarbazide before the silver step improves the
staining immensely.
I would also look at the periodic acid. Is it too dilute, though 0.5% should
work? I usually cover this by using a 1% solution for 20 minutes.
Regards
Tony Henwood JP, MSc, BAppSc
I am reminded of the Beatles classic:
"Will you still need me, will you still feed me, When I'm sixty-four"
40 years! - a sh.. load of experience, a sh.. load of knowledge.
Histotechnology worldwide still needs your wisdom so we hope you can keep an
eye on us through Histonet and the Block.
En
Hi Greg,
I would just grab some kidneys from the butcher, freeze and section as usual.
They should give equivalent results to the older unit.
Regards
Tony Henwood JP, MSc, BAppSc, GradDipSysAnalys, CT(ASC), FFSc(RCPA)
Principal Scientist, the Children’s Hospital at Westmead
Adjunct Fellow, Schoo
do your cytotechs screen the non-gyn cases? Yes
Do they regularly assist with FNA's? Yes
How many paps are they expected to screen in a day? Not as important as the
Turn-around-time (TAT) - if the TAT is short, regularly, then all is good.
Regards
Tony Henwood JP, MSc, BAppSc, GradDipSysAnalys, C
We have had this issue previously.
We tracked it down to the brain biopsies arriving in "Isotonic" saline (which
is really not isotonic).
See: Henwood, A., (2007) “Adverse effect of saline on brain intraoperative
(frozen section) Histology” J Histotechnol 30(3):193.
Ask the surgeons to send the
d NSW 2145, AUSTRALIA
From: John Garratt
Sent: Saturday, 10 July 2021 05:31
To: Paula; Tony Henwood (SCHN); 'Erick Rodriguez'
Cc: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: Re: [Histonet] "cooked" biopsy
Interesting discussion.
At CPQA we recently started a H
Hi Paula,
We can check the purity of the xylene quite easily:
Xylene Purity Test Procedure
Note: The recommended and most accurate method of determining the purity of the
recycled xylene is by doing a Gas Chromatography analysis. The following
method can be used to obtain an acceptable confi
Hi Carrie,
Over-heating of sections (and tissue blocks) for IPX is probably one of the
most significant and unappreciated pre-analytical factors that can affect
immunolocalisation. We closely scrutinise slides closely for overheating,
especially those sent to us for immunostaining. We strongly
The following might be useful:
Iron Histochemistry - A Review
It is convenient to divide iron-containing complexes in human tissues into two
categories: those in which the iron is loosely bound to proteins and easily
released by mild acid treatment (eg hemosiderin) and those in which the iron i
With Red-Green colour-blindness, I have found that a multi-stain approach works
for example:
Often the ZN counterstain used is light green. A second ZN stained with
Loefler's Methlene Blue for comparison seems to help.
The same can be done with the Masson's Stain (compare the Fast Green FCF or t
Hi Colleen,
I was involved in an Immunohistochemical study of the nerves in the human
ureter that used Zamboni's fixative and cryostat sections. This study was
before the invention of HIER.
If you are using Zamboni-fixed, paraffin embedded tissue then you will probably
need to do HIER before m
Hi all,
Our usual supplier of Bombesin antibody (ABCAM AB86037) (used for
neuroendocrine cell hyperplasia of infancy) no longer carries this antibody.
Does anyone know of an alternative that works well in FFPE sections?
Regards
Tony Henwood JP, MSc, BAppSc, GradDipSysAnalys, CT(ASC), FFSc(RCPA)
There is a generally accepted scheme of staining which is expected of
Romanowsky stained preparations, namely purple chromatin, blue leucocyte
cytoplasm, purple-black basophil granules, red-pink eosinophil granules, purple
neutrophil granules, purple platelet granules, and pink red-cells (1).
I agree
Regards
Tony Henwood JP, MSc, BAppSc, GradDipSysAnalys, CT(ASC), FFSc(RCPA)
Principal Scientist, the Children's Hospital at Westmead
Adjunct Fellow, School of Medicine, University of Western Sydney
Tel: 612 9845 3306
Fax: 612 9845 3318
Pathology Department
the children's hospital at
I have found that that this gives a pleasing tinctorial result:
Haematoxylin and Eosin
Principle
Traditional HE procedures generally worked poorly on GM sections, with
background staining of the plastic embedment and the loosening of sections from
glass slides when alcoholic eosin is used. Aqu
Hi Maxim,
Excellent
At least this amazing piece of history can live on.
Regards
Tony Henwood JP, MSc, BAppSc, GradDipSysAnalys, CT(ASC), FFSc(RCPA)
Principal Scientist, the Children’s Hospital at Westmead
Adjunct Fellow, School of Medicine, University of Western Sydney
Tel: 612 9845 3306
Fax: 612
Check the age of the Iodine.
Iodine solutions lose their activity over time (?notice the brown
discolouration on the parafilm sealing a coplin jar) even though the solution
still looks as brown as when it was made.
Magee, C. M., Rodeheaver, G., Edgerton, M. T., & Edlich, R. F. (1975). A more
r
Hi Richard,
It will depend on the size of the tissue and the source.
Lung tissue is the major concern. Other tissues not affected as much (based on
the burgeoning literature on Covid-19).
Routine fixation time are applicable, remembering that the alcohols and heated
wax will also inactivate the
I agree,
Slightly thicker makes the polarisation easier to see (personal experience).
I would love to see a study comparing section thickness Vs polarisation
characteristics.
Anyone interested? (being a kids hospital we rarely see amyloidosis)
Regards
Tony Henwood JP, MSc, BAppSc, GradDipSysAn
And each edition gets better (and better).
Regards
Tony Henwood JP, MSc, BAppSc, GradDipSysAnalys, CT(ASC), FFSc(RCPA)
Principal Scientist, the Children's Hospital at Westmead
Adjunct Fellow, School of Medicine, University of Western Sydney
Tel: 612 9845 3306
Fax: 612 9845 3318
Pathology Dep
Hi all,
I was reading an article entitled “Evaluation of Tissue Adhesion and Staining
Performance of BOND Adhesive Microscope Slides: A Comparative Study on the
BOND-III and BOND-MAX Platforms”
(https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/f5f1/ad0741bc5445d0e1079a0d07a32c8a3a26c1.pdf)
and they make menti
Hi Dane,
Fading and especially leaching of the eosin, will occur if slides are
incompletely dehydrated. Flip out the subsidiary condenser lens (or drop the
condenser) and look for refractile water droplets.
Certain mountants can also cause fading of H&Es.
I would also be concerned about the xyle
We regularly leave smeared slides in 95% overnight and often over the weekend
before staining.
There have not been any morphological issues noted.
Remember to seal the lid since alcohol will evaporate quite quickly. You will
notice an increased eosinophilia in the dried upper area of the slid
de-identified material that would have been disposed of?
Hey, my rant for the year!!
-Original Message-
From: John Garratt [mailto:john.garr...@ciqc.ca]
Sent: Friday, 24 January 2020 11:36 AM
To: Garrey Faller
Cc: Tony Henwood (SCHN) ; Muhammad Azam
; Terri Braud ;
histonet@lists.utsou
Hi all,
Be careful of using cell block matrix that requires heat to solubilise the
matrix (eg agar or other commercial matrixes like Histogel).
Adding a heated matrix to unfixed, or even formalin fixed, material can
denature some antigens (eg CEA) resulting in a false negative IPX.
Unfortunatel
Hi Jennifer,
I have had excellent success with lysing the red blood cells (using Isotonic
Ammonium Chloride) prior to cell block preparation with thromboplastin-plasma.
The lysing solution contains EDTA so you will need to add a few drops of 1%
calcium chloride. Method as follows:
Lysis solut
Hi Charles,
Yes we use the same protocol for all, though sometimes we need to modify if for
example tissue has been overly decalcified (eg mandible).
Regards
Tony Henwood JP, MSc, BAppSc, GradDipSysAnalys, CT(ASC), FFSc(RCPA)
Principal Scientist, the Children’s Hospital at Westmead
Adjunct Fello
Hi Paula,
We routinely do this, especially for our fetal autopsy blocks.
We are then able to process and let them set at room temp until we are able to
embed and cut.
Some cases are more urgent than others so these can be expedited a lot easier
since they will only need embedding, sectioning and
Hi Charles,
I have had excellent success with lysing the red blood cells (using Isotonic
Ammonium Chloride) prior to cell block preparation with thromboplastin-plasma.
The lysing solution contains EDTA so you will need to add a few drops of 1%
calcium chloride. Method as follows:
Lysis soluti
Are the tissues taken directly from the molten wax and placed in the
wax-containing mold or are they allowed to cool before embedding?
One cause of tissue separation is the difference in temperature between tissue
and embedding wax.
Try taking directly from molten wax and embedding directly in
th.nsw.gov.au/signatures/shared_banner.jpg]<http://res.schn.health.nsw.gov.au/signatures/shared_forwarder.php>
♲ Please consider the environment before printing this email.
From: John Kiernan [mailto:jkier...@uwo.ca]
Sent: Wednesday, 2 October 2019 3:01 PM
To: Sanders, Jeanine (CDC/DDID/NCEZI
Two good screening stains are Mallory and Parker’s Fresh Hematoxylin Stain for
Metals and Timm’s Silver Sulphide Method for Metals. Malloy's results:
Aluminium Blue-black
Copper Greenish-blue
IronBlue-black
LeadBlue
ZincBlue
For more specific staining:
Aluminon Stain for Alumi
ad
Adjunct Fellow, School of Medicine, University of Western Sydney
Tel: 612 9845 3306
Fax: 612 9845 3318
Pathology Department
the children's hospital at westmead
Cnr Hawkesbury Road and Hainsworth Street, Westmead
Locked Bag 4001, Westmead NSW 2145, AUSTRALIA
-Original Message-----
Fro
insworth Street, Westmead
Locked Bag 4001, Westmead NSW 2145, AUSTRALIA
From: Bob Richmond
Sent: Saturday, July 27, 2019 11:27:54 AM
To: Tony Henwood (SCHN)
Subject: Re: [Histonet] Victoria blue for lung tissue
Is this method published anywhere that "Amy" wo
Victoria Blue is the dye used in Miller's Stain for Elastic Tissue.
It is also used in the Roche Ventana Benchmark Stainer to stain elastic Tissue:
Miller PJ (1971) An elastin stain. Med Lab Technol 28, 148–149
Karen Percival & Zaher Radi (2017) Comparison of five elastin histochemical
stains to
Processing seems adequate.
After processing, how long do they sit in the embedding centre block holding
tank before embedding?
We found that quite a few antigens were affected when we stored control tonsil
in the embedding centre (dry) at 60oC for a few days before embedding. In
summary:
Anti
Possibly, the edges have been allowed to dry prior to immersion in fixative.
Also is there evidence of cautery artefact?
Regards
Tony Henwood JP, MSc, BAppSc, GradDipSysAnalys, CT(ASC), FFSc(RCPA)
Principal Scientist, the Children's Hospital at Westmead
Adjunct Fellow, School of Medicine, Univ
This paper might be useful:
Ehinger, A., Bendahl, P. O., Rydén, L., Fernö, M., & Alkner, S. (2018).
Stability of oestrogen and progesterone receptor antigenicity in formalin‐fixed
paraffin‐embedded breast cancer tissue over time. Apmis, 126(9), 746-754.
Regards
Tony Henwood JP, MSc, BAppSc,
One article that might be useful is:
Surprenant D, Garib G, Hutchens K, Dreifke M, Speiser J, Winterfield L,
Peterson A, Krol C, Adams W, Tung R. Novel Use of Preoperative Epidermal
Coloring of Very Small Dermatological Specimens-Protocol for Reduction of Lost
Specimens. The American Journal of
Yep,
Definitely an issue.
You can easily stain the IPX slides with H&E, though the discernibility of the
cells and tissue structure with the H&E will depend on the degree of DAB
product laid down (eg I would expect it to be difficult with a Vimentin IPX
compared to a CD15).
(Grosset, A. A., L
Hi Cayman,
Unfortunately, applying HIER to a negative control for an antibody that
requires enzyme retrieval (or no retrieval at all) is not appropriate.
The pre-treatment processes are different and could unmask different epitopes.
If you are using a negative control then the whole procedure nee
Hi Richard,
We sure do
Regards
Tony Henwood JP, MSc, BAppSc, GradDipSysAnalys, CT(ASC), FFSc(RCPA)
Principal Scientist, the Children's Hospital at Westmead
Adjunct Fellow, School of Medicine, University of Western Sydney
Tel: 612 9845 3306
Fax: 612 9845 3318
Pathology Department
the childre
The following might be useful:
Tazawa, K., & Tsutsumi, Y. (1998). Effect of prolonged staining with
hematoxylin on detecting Helicobacter pyiori in hematoxylin‐eosin‐stained
gastric mucosa. Pathology international, 48(6), 448-452.
Regards
Tony Henwood JP, MSc, BAppSc, GradDipSysAnalys, CT(ASC
Cross-contamination has not been proven in FFPE tissues.
I have not seen it in nearly 40 years of practice
Do you have any evidence of cross-contamination in FFPE?
Regards
Tony Henwood JP, MSc, BAppSc, GradDipSysAnalys, CT(ASC), FFSc(RCPA)
Principal Scientist, the Children’s Hospital at Westmead
We do,
It works well
Regards
Tony Henwood JP, MSc, BAppSc, GradDipSysAnalys, CT(ASC), FFSc(RCPA)
Principal Scientist, the Children's Hospital at Westmead
Adjunct Fellow, School of Medicine, University of Western Sydney
Tel: 612 9845 3306
Fax: 612 9845 3318
Pathology Department
the children'
Will definitely depend on the antibody you are using. Some references:
Jacobs, T. W., Prioleau, J. E., Stillman, I. E., & Schnitt, S. J. (1996). Loss
of tumor marker-immunostaining intensity on stored paraffin slides of breast
cancer. JNCI: Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 88(15), 1054-
Try your eosin stain used in your H&E or 1% Neutral red in 2% acetic acid
Regards
Tony Henwood JP, MSc, BAppSc, GradDipSysAnalys, CT(ASC), FFSc(RCPA)
Principal Scientist, the Children's Hospital at Westmead
Adjunct Fellow, School of Medicine, University of Western Sydney
Tel: 612 9845 3306
Fax
We routinely use the following
Hew-Shue (1991) has described a useful pH indicator for working neutral
buffered formalin solutions. Bromocresol purple (CAS: 115-40-2) , when added to
formalin solutions, serves as an indicator of pH as well as, from a safety
aspect, labelling the solution as for
Hi April,
Try this
Control tissues: liver, kidney and prostate
Fixation and Sectioning: Air dried unfixed 8µm frozen sections
Solutions:
1. Substrate solution
Naphtol AS-B1 phosphate 0.005g (Fluka 70494 1g)
Dimethylfomamide0.5ml
Warning: Suspected Carcinogen
I would recommend the Orcein stain:
Henwood, A., (2003) "Current applications of orcein in histochemistry. A brief
review with some new observations concerning influence of dye batch variation
and aging of dye solutions on staining" Biotech Histochem. 78(6):303-8.
And you can pair the orcein st
Immunohistochemistry validation is much more than simply 20 positives and 20
negative cases, though this will allow you to meet most accreditation
requirements.
Validation is a multi step process:
1. Optimisation: following a thorough literature review (what should and
should not stain, cl
Hi Paula,
We use Adenovirus antibody from BioSB (Diagnostic Technology)
Cat Number BSB 5040
Clone 20/11 and 2/6
Isotype IgG1/K
Dilution1:200 with citrate retrieval on the Bond 3
Regards
Tony Henwood JP, MSc, BAppSc, GradDipSysAnalys, CT(ASC), FFSc(RCPA)
Principal Scientist, the C
Hi Vicki,
We recently did a study that we published in our local journal (Histograph June
2017) that migh be of use:
Controlled Section Baking for Immunohistochemistry
Tony Henwood, Principal Scientist, Histopathology, The Children's Hospital at
Westmead
One source of poor immunostaining i
Hi Beth,
We have found the same thing.
You get a moderate staining (half of what you see with most B cell lymphomas)
with clone 1EW (as supplied with the Leica Bond rtu).
You will get similar results with clone 24 (38%: Adams, et al (2009).
Clinical, phenotypic and genetic similarities and disp
Hi all,
I am having difficulty locating the method for the Patzelt stain.
I came across it while reading: Kimura, S., Hirai, A., & Shimizu, H. (1981).
Epidermal vacuolation: an artifact due to injection of local anesthetics.
Archives of dermatological research, 270(4), 413-419.
This paper refe
We use Leica rtu PA0110 on the Bond 3
Regards
Tony Henwood JP, MSc, BAppSc, GradDipSysAnalys, CT(ASC), FFSc(RCPA)
Principal Scientist, the Children's Hospital at Westmead
Adjunct Fellow, School of Medicine, University of Western Sydney
Tel: 612 9845 3306
Fax: 612 9845 3318
Pathology Departmen
Yep,
We have one and our new embedding centre has one built in.
Saves a lot of time in preparing blocks for trimming.
A lot safer than using a knife/scraper to remove excess wax from the block.
Highly recommend it
Regards
Tony Henwood JP, MSc, BAppSc, GradDipSysAnalys, CT(ASC), FFSc(RCPA)
Pri
Hi Richard,
We use NCL-PARVO from Leica
Details as follows:
ANTIGEN NAME:Parvovirus B19
OTHER NAMES:
Clone: R92F6
Isotype:IgG1
DESCRIPTION: Mouse monoclonal to native parvovirus B19 purified from human
plasma. Human parvovirus B19 (
It is best to remove the blocks and let them set at room temperature.
Leaving them at 60 or more degrees can adversely affect antigens.
We routinely do this with our autopsies and have not noted any issues.
Regards
Tony Henwood JP, MSc, BAppSc, GradDipSysAnalys, CT(ASC), FFSc(RCPA)
Principal S
I would also check the fixation.
Do the smears look air-dried. The larger nuclei, following air-drying do not
concentrate the Hx as much as prompt alcohol fixation resulting in paler
stained nuclei.
Regards
Tony Henwood JP, MSc, BAppSc, GradDipSysAnalys, CT(ASC), FFSc(RCPA)
Principal Scientis
Yep start at last alcohol in other processor, xylene & wax as usual.
If the tissues have remained covered in alcohol, you should not have a problem
Regards
Tony Henwood JP, MSc, BAppSc, GradDipSysAnalys, CT(ASC), FFSc(RCPA)
Principal Scientist, the Children's Hospital at Westmead
Adjunct Fellow,
logy Department
the children's hospital at westmead
Cnr Hawkesbury Road and Hainsworth Street, Westmead
Locked Bag 4001, Westmead NSW 2145, AUSTRALIA
From: Allan Wang [mailto:alla...@gmail.com]
Sent: Tuesday, 18 April 2017 5:51 PM
To: Tony Henwood (SCHN)
Cc: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Su
Hi Bianca,
Well for most Pathology departments, Immunofluorescence (IF) is used for Renal
and Skin biopsies; looking for human Immunoglobulin (Igs) deposition on
basement membranes. The advantage here is not so much the fluorescence, but
that we use unfixed frozen sections. The buffer rinse befo
If the specimen is placed on absorbent paper prior to fixation, the paper will
gradually absorb the water from the specimen causing it to dry out.
Microscopically the tissue will look a little like what you see when a laser
scalpel is used to excise a skin specimen. The heat affected eosin stain
This is sometimes known as Newel's solution for revealing lymph nodes in fatty
specimens:
Newell KJ, Sawka BW, Rudrick BF, Driman DK. (2001) "GEWF solution" Arch Pathol
Lab Med 125:642 645.
Absolute ethanol1000ml
Water 340ml
Concentrated
All the Best Bob,
Have a great retirement.
Maybe we will see you in Australia on one of those big boats that make their
way here regularly.
Regards
Tony Henwood JP, MSc, BAppSc, GradDipSysAnalys, CT(ASC), FFSc(RCPA)
Principal Scientist, the Children's Hospital at Westmead
Adjunct Fellow, Sch
:alla...@gmail.com]
Sent: Saturday, 7 January 2017 4:01 PM
To: Tony Henwood (SCHN)
Cc: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: RE: [Histonet] Dirty H&E after break
Yep, filtering the hematoxlyn fixed it. Thanks for the tip.
Is it worthwhile to filter the eosin, alcohols, and xylene substitute
Hi Allan,
The flakes are alum precipitates.
I would suggest filtering the haematoxylin before use.
Regards
Tony Henwood JP, MSc, BAppSc, GradDipSysAnalys, CT(ASC), FFSc(RCPA)
Principal Scientist, the Children's Hospital at Westmead
Adjunct Fellow, School of Medicine, University of Western Sydn
Hi Charles,
Many issues could be in play.
Since the centre of the tissue is causing problems, then I would look at
fixation; are the spaces around cells in the centre of the block wider than at
the edges (conversely do the cells look like they are smaller than their
counterparts at the edge)?
Vivian,
After cutting the frozen sections, how are you fixing them?
If they are air-dried then they will tend to give a washed out nuclear stain.
I would suggest immediate fixation of the sections in either methanol or to
make even a brighter H&E: 1% acetic acid in ethanol (1ml glacial acetic ac
Hi Alan,
Not every source states that diluted antibodies only last for a few weeks, in
fact my experience as well as those of the commercial suppliers (see their data
sheets) indicates otherwise, for example, I just re-validated an antibody
(CD45RO) that was prepared 8 years ago (but unfortuna
Hi Mighnon,
I find the so-called competency for all staff, including laboratory managers
one of the stupidest items ever to be put in a standard (ie ISO 15189).
All staff who perform a test need to be recorded as being competent in it, no
problem with this but managers as well?
How ridiculous!
Hi Gareth,
You will probably have to design your own Continuing Education Session.
I would recommend the following topics:
1. Nature of formaldehyde - safety aspects, explanation of the MSDS.
2. What formaldehyde is used for
3. Appropriate packaging of pots containing specimens in fo
The KMnO4/oxalic acid sequence will weaken the tissue adherence.
If you do not have to use Peroxidase/DAB, then I would recommend alkaline
phosphatase labelling (+red chromagen).
Remember KMnO4/oxalic acid can be deleterious to some antigen-antibody
reactions.
We found that LCA, CAM5.2, L26, al
Yep,
We do.
We have a separate dehydration sequence for PAP and other special stains
(separate from the eosin dehydration sequence).
We have a Leica (used to be Vision Biosystems) Autostainer
Regards
Tony Henwood JP, MSc, BAppSc, GradDipSysAnalys, CT(ASC), FFSc(RCPA)
Principal Scientist, the C
Only a crazy Aussie would do this!!
Regards
Tony Henwood JP, MSc, BAppSc, GradDipSysAnalys, CT(ASC), FFSc(RCPA)
Principal Scientist, the Children's Hospital at Westmead
Adjunct Fellow, School of Medicine, University of Western Sydney
Tel: 612 9845 3306
Fax: 612 9845 3318
Pathology Department
Yep,
I have had a few techs in my time who could not digest glycogen if their life
depended on it.
Their salivary amylase just did not work.
It was not a major (not even a minor) health issue for them. They looked
healthy enough (actually healthier than me).
This is one of the reasons we devel
Hi all,
I am doing an H&E workshop next month and one of the Hx counterstains I will be
including is Erythrosin-eosin (see below).
This counterstain is the preferred by some of our major Histopathology
departments in Australia.
The issue I have is that I cannot find a reference for this variant
You might find these articles to be useful
Tracy, R. E., & Walia, P. (2002). A method to fix lipids for staining fat
embolism in paraffin sections. Histopathology, 41(1), 75-79.
Turello, R., Snyder, D., & Hartman, H. A. (1984). A modification the osmium
tetroxide post-fixation technique for the
I would look at the dewaxing stage.
Have you changed waxes?
Try longer in xylene &/or longer in the oven.
Regards
Tony Henwood JP, MSc, BAppSc, GradDipSysAnalys, CT(ASC), FFSc(RCPA)
Laboratory Manager & Senior Scientist, the Children's Hospital at Westmead
Adjunct Fellow, School of Medicine, Un
Hi Allison,
You probably need to track down the source of the Candida.
I would suggest you cytocentrifuge each solution, air-dry the cytospin slides
and stain with a giemsa.
Most fungi (esp candida) will show up.
See:
Henwood A (2013) "Fungal Contamination of Hanks Solution" Diagnostic
Cytopatho
Oh dear,
Are you considering sacking your Special Stains Tech?
Only kidding.
I wish I had the money to buy one myself.
Regards
Tony Henwood JP, MSc, BAppSc, GradDipSysAnalys, CT(ASC), FFSc(RCPA)
Laboratory Manager & Senior Scientist, the Children's Hospital at Westmead
Adjunct Fellow, School
The validation would already have been done.
You only need to check if the re-location has affected any equipment components.
I would take a few cassettes of spare tissue and process it on your most used
program and await the results.
Regards
Tony Henwood JP, MSc, BAppSc, GradDipSysAnalys, CT
If the ground substance and mucin are not staining, it would be a problem with
the alcian blue solution.
Microscopically check the slides after the alcian blue step - if no or weak
staining then:
1. Is the alcian blue at pH 2.5 or is it pH1 - (goblet cells in stomach
and ground substance r
The RCPA (in Australia) recently requested that laboratories perform Technical
Failure Repeat Audits that might be of use.
Subsequently I produced a brief report for our Society's journal:
Audit of Technical Failures
Tony Henwood
Histopathology
The Children's Hospital at Westmead, Sydney
The RCPA
Laboratory Air-conditioning systems should be separate from patient area
systems (as is required for operating theatre units).
I understand this to be good practice.
From: Goins, Tresa [tgo...@mt.gov]
Sent: Thursday, 4 June 2015 12:18 AM
To: Tony Henwood
s sit on awaiting transport?
We cannot live in a bubble.
Paula Pierce, BS, HTL(ASCP)HT President Excalibur Pathology, Inc. 5830 N Blue
Lake Dr. Norman, OK 73069 405-759-3953 PH 405-759-7513 FAX
www.excaliburpathology.com
From: "Goins, Tresa"
To: Tony Henwood (SCHN) ; Mi
John,
I totally agree
Tony
From: John Kiernan [jkier...@uwo.ca]
Sent: Saturday, 6 June 2015 2:31 PM
To: Peter Noyce; histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: Re: [Histonet] tissue fixation-formaldehyde concentrations which
is best.
Dear Pet
Hi Michelle,
Why would patients be in a histo lab anyway?
From: Michelle Lamphere [michelle.lamph...@childrens.com]
Sent: Sunday, 31 May 2015 10:36 PM
To: 'histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu'
Subject: Re: [Histonet] plants in the lab
Our hospital Safety and
Hi Mica,
Most haematoxylins will do eg Harris or Mayer's.
I would recommend a light counterstain (it is a counterstain, not the main
stain).
Differentiate if too strong.
Also periodic acid treatment increases nuclear affinity for Hx so shorten the
counterstain time.
Regards,
Tony
_
1 - 100 of 254 matches
Mail list logo