Hello Rebecca,

Reguarding the following message:

"I had a biopsy today that was nearly impossible to see on the sponges during 
embedding or in the block.  I've heard mention of marking these with eosin to 
make them easier to see.  Has anyone done this?  Or do you use some other type 
of marking dye for this purpose?
Thanks for your input!
Rebecca"



I have worked at a few  places that have put 4-10 cc in the last alcohol of the 
processor and it is a great help with those tiny, white biopsies and the very 
thin prostate biopsy cores. It is put in the last alcohol because if you put it 
any of the solutions before the last alcohol it will be washed out. It does not 
overstain your tissue because it is removed during the depariffination and 
dehydration steps before staining.



A word of caution, we now  have a Peloris processor and were told if we put 
Eosin on the processor it will invalidate our warranty so I would check before 
doing it.  We greatly miss that pink tint in the tissue, it made it much easier 
to embed and face as well as section.



Cassandra Davis
Histology Technician
Anatomical Pathology Laboratory
Saint Francis Healthcare
701 N. Clayton Street
Wilmington,DE 19805
Office:  302-575-8095
Email:  cda...@che-east.org<mailto:n...@che-east.org>
www.saintfrancishealthcare.org

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