Title: Histotechniques
1Histotechniques
- Dr Mulazim Hussain Bukhari
- MBBS, DCP, MPhil, FCPS, PhD
- Associate Prof Pathology
- King Edward Medical University, Lahore
2Tissue Processing
- Specimen Accessioning
- Gross Examination
- Fixation
- Tissue Processing
- Sectioning
- Frozen Sections
- Staining
- H and E staining
- Cover slipping
- Decalcification
- Artifacts in Histologic Sections
- Problems in Tissue Processing
3Safety in the Lab
- The lab should be well illuminated and
well-ventilated. - Rules and Regulations governing
- formalin and
- hydrocarbonds
- such as xylene
- and toluene.
- Limits set by the Occupational Safety and Health
Administration (OSHA) that should not be
exceeded. - These limits should be revised and revived to
reduced any mishap
4Cont.
- Every chemical compound used in the laboratory
should have a materials safety data sheet on file
- that specifies the nature,
- toxicity,
- and safety precautions to be taken when handling
the compound. - The laboratory must have a method for disposal of
hazardous wastes. - Health care facilities processing tissues often
contract this to a waste management company. - Tissues that are collected should be stored in
formalin - and may be disposed by incineration
- or by putting them through a "tissue grinder"
attached to a large sink (similar to a large
garbage disposal unit).
5Cont.
- Check the sharpness of scalpel, scissors and
quality of other ones like ruler, probes weighing
machines - Every instrument used in the laboratory should
meet electrical safety specifications and have
written instructions regarding its use. - Flammable materials may only be stored in
approved rooms and only in storage cabinets that
are designed for this purpose.
6Cont.
- Fire safety procedures are to be posted.
- Safety equipment including fire extinguishers,
- fire blankets,
- and fire alarms should be within easy access.
- A shower and eyewash should be readily
available. - No smoking, eating or movements in the labs
- Use disposable gloves
7Cont.
- Laboratory accidents must be documented and
investigated with incident reports and industrial
accident reports. - Specific hazards that you should know about
include - Bouin's solution is made with picric acid. This
acid is only sold in the aqueous state. When it
dries out, it becomes explosive.
8Sodium azide
- Many reagent kits have sodium azide as a
preservative. - You are supposed to flush solutions containing
sodium azide down the drain - with lots of water, or
- there is a tendency for the azide to form metal
azides in the plumbing. - These are also explosive.
9Drainage
- Benzidine, benzene, anthracene, and napthol
containing compounds are carcinogens and should
not be used. - Mercury-containing solutions (Zenker's or B-5)
should always be discarded into proper
containers. - Mercury, if poured down a drain, will form
amalgams with the metal that build up and cannot
be removed. - Hazards of usually used formalin
10Objective
- Tissues from the body taken for diagnosis of
disease processes must be processed in the
histology laboratory to produce microscopic
slides that are viewed under the microscope by
pathologists. - The techniques for processing the tissues,
whether biopsies, larger specimens removed at
surgery, or tissues from autopsy - The persons who do the tissue processing and make
the glass microscopic slides are
histotechnologists
11Specimen Accessioning
- Tissue specimens received in the surgical
pathology laboratory have a request form that
lists the patient information and history along
with a description of the site of origin. - The specimens are accessioned by giving them a
number that will identify each specimen for each
patient
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13Grossing
- Describing the specimen
- Placing all or parts of it into a small plastic
cassette - When a malignancy is suspected
- Inking a gross specimen for margins
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15Fixation
- Types of fixatives (AMAPO)
- Aldehydes
- Mercurials
- Alcohols
- Picrates
- Oxidizing agents
16Fixation - factors affecting fixation
- There are a number of factors that will affect
the fixation process - Buffering
- Penetration
- Volume
- Temperature
- Concentration
- Time interval
- Position of tissue
17Buffering
- Fixation is best carried out close to neutral pH,
in the range of 6-8. - Hypoxia of tissues lowers the pH, so there must
be buffering capacity in the fixative to prevent
excessive acidity. - Acidity favors formation of formalin-heme pigment
that appears as black, polarizable deposits in
tissue. - Common buffers include phosphate, bicarbonate,
cacodylate, and veronal. - Commercial formalin is buffered with phosphate at
a pH of 7.
18Penetration
- Penetration of tissues depends upon the
diffusability of each individual fixative, which
is a constant. - Formalin and alcohol penetrate the best, and
glutaraldehyde the worst. - Mercurials and others are somewhere in between.
- One way to get around this problem is sectioning
the tissues thinly (2 to 3 mm). - Penetration into a thin section will occur more
rapidly than for a thick section
19Volume
- The volume of fixative is important.
- There should be a 101 ratio of fixative to
tissue. - Obviously, we often get away with less than this,
but may not get ideal fixation. - One way to partially solve the problem is to
change the fixative at intervals to avoid
exhaustion of the fixative. - Agitation of the specimen in the fixative will
also enhance fixation.
20Temperature
- Increasing the temperature, as with all chemical
reactions, will increase the speed of fixation,
as long as you don't cook the tissue. - Hot formalin will fix tissues faster, and this is
often the first step on an automated tissue
processor.
21Concentration of fixative
- Concentration of fixative should be adjusted down
to the lowest level possible, because you will
expend less money for the fixative. - Formalin is best at 10
- glutaraldehyde is generally made up at 0.25 to
4. - Too high a concentration may adversely affect the
tissues and produce artefact similar to excessive
heat.
22Time interval
- Also very important is time interval from of
removal of tissues to fixation. - The faster you can get the tissue and fix it, the
better. - Artefact will be introduced by drying, so if
tissue is left out, please keep it moist with
saline. - The longer you wait, the more cellular organelles
will be lost and the more nuclear shrinkage and
artefactual clumping will occur
23Kaiserling formula for preservation for surgical
specimens for museum
- Formalin pure 5 liter
- Distilled water 22.5 liter
- Potassium acetate(CH3COOK ) 250gm
- Chloral hydrate 50 gm
-
27 liter - Potassium acetate is used in mixtures applied for
tissue preservation, fixation, and mummification.
Most museums today use the formaldehyde-based
method recommended by Kaiserling in 1897 and
containing potassium acetate. - For example, Lenin's mummy was soaked in a bath
containing potassium acetate
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25Gough Sections
- Whole organs may be sectioned on paper by the
methods of Gough and Wentworth. - These sections provide valuable information on
whole organ structure and serve as links between
mounted museum specimens and histologic sections.
26Colour restoration
- Small amount of sodium hydrosulphite to preserve
the colour. - If the container is properly sealed, the colour
restoration is then permanent. - For photography, the procedure is to first wash
and clean the specimen. - It is then soaked in an excess of 60 ethanol
until the colour has been restored satisfactorily
27Characteristics of Fixatives
- Chemical Fixatives
- Freeze Substitution
- Microwave Fixation
28Ideal Fixative
- Penetrate cells or tissue rapidly
- Preserve cellular structure before cell can react
to produce structural artifacts - Not cause autofluorescence, and act as an
antifade reagent
29Chemical Fixation
- Coagulating Fixatives
- Crosslinking Fixatives
30Coagulating Fixatives
31Coagulating Fixatives
Advantages
- Fix specimens by rapidly changing hydration state
of cellular components - Proteins are either coagulated or extracted
- Preserve antigen recognition often
Disadvantages
- Cause significant shrinkage of specimens
- Difficult to do accurate 3D confocal images
- Can shrink cells to 50 size (height)
- Commercial preparations of formaldehyde contain
methanol as a stabilizing agent
32Crosslinking Fixatives
- Glutaraldehyde
- Formaldehyde
- Ethelene glycol-bis-succinimidyl succinate (EGS)
33Cross-linking Fixatives
- Form covalent crosslinks that are determined by
the active groups of each compound
34Principles of Fixation
- Once tissues are removed from the body, they
undergo a process of self-destruction or
autolysis - which is initiated soon after cell death by the
action of intracellular enzymes causing the
breakdown of protein and eventual liquefaction of
the cell.
35Principles of Fixation
- Autolysis is independent of any bacterial action,
- retarded by cold,
- greatly accelerated at temperatures of about 30C
and - almost inhibited by heating to 50C
36Cont.
- Autolysis is more severe in tissues which are
rich in enzymes, - such as the liver,
- brain and kidney,
- and is less rapid in tissues such as elastic
fibre and collagen.
37Cont.
- By light microscopy, autolysed tissue presents a
washed-out' appearance with swelling of
cytoplasm, - eventually converting to a granular, homogeneous
mass which fails to take up stains.
38How Autolysed tissue looks like
- The nuclei of autolytic cells may show some of
the changes of necrosis - including condensation (pyknosis),
- fragmentation (karyorrhexis) and
- lysis (karyolysis)
- D/D these are not accompanied by an inflammatory
or cellular response.
39How Autolysed tissue looks like
- There may be diffusion of intracellular
substances of diagnostic significance, such as
glycogen which is lost from the cells in the
absence of prompt and suitable fixation. - Autolysis also causes desquamation of epithelium
which separates from its basement membranes.
40Bacterial Action on dead tissue
- Bacterial decomposition can also produce changes
in tissues that mimic those of autolysis and is
brought about by bacterial proliferation in the
dead tissue.
41Bacterial Action on dead tissue
- Such bacteria may normally be present in the body
during life such as the non-pathogenetic
organisms present in the bowel, or may be present
in diseased tissues at the time of death such as
in septicaemia.
42The objective of fixation
- is to preserve cells and tissue constituents in
as close a life-like state as possible and to
allow them to undergo further preparative
procedures without change. - Fixation arrests autolysis and bacterial
decomposition and stabilizes the cellular and
tissue constituents so that they withstand the
subsequent stages of tissue processing. - Aside from these requirements for the production
of tissue sections, increasing interest in cell
constituents and the extensive use of
immunohistochemistry to augment histological
diagnosis has imposed additional requirements.
43Cont.
- Fixation should also provide for the preservation
of tissue substances and proteins. - Fixation is, therefore, the first step and the
foundation in a sequence of events that
culminates in the final examination of a tissue
section.
44Common pitfalls of fixation
- It is relevant to point out that fixation in
itself constitutes a major artifact. - The living cell is fluid or in a semi-fluid
state, Whereas fixation produces coagulation of
tissue proteins and constituents, a necessary
event to prevent their loss or diffusion during
tissue processing the passage through hypertonic
and hypotonic solutions during tissue processing
would otherwise disrupt the cells. - For example, if fresh unfixed tissues were washed
for prolonged periods in running water, severe
and irreparable damage and cell lysis would
result. - In contrast, if the tissues were first fixed in
formalin, subsequent immersion in water is
generally harmless.
45Summary of objective
- Fixation
- Confers chemical stability on the tissue
- Hardens the tissue (helps further handling)
- Halts enzyme autolysis
- Halts bacterial putrefaction
- May enhance later staining techniques
- Introduces a 'consistent artifact'
46Aldehydes
- include formaldehyde (formalin) and
glutaraldehyde. - Tissue is fixed by cross-linkages formed in the
proteins, particularly between lysine residues. - This cross-linkage does not harm the structure of
proteins greatly, so that antigenicity is not
lost.
47Cont.
- Therefore, formaldehyde is good for
immunoperoxidase techniques. Formalin penetrates
tissue well, but is relatively slow. - The standard solution is 10 neutral buffered
formalin. - A buffer prevents acidity that would promote
autolysis and cause precipitation of formol-heme
pigment in the tissues.
48Formaldehyde
- Formaldehyde, as 4 buffered formaldehyde (10
buffered formalin), is the most widely employed
universal fixative particularly for routine
paraffin embedded sections. - It is a gas with a very pungent odor, soluble in
water to a maximum extent of 40 by weight and is
sold as such under the name of formaldehyde (40)
or formalin (a colorless liquid).
49Formaldehyde
- Formaldehyde is also obtainable in a stable solid
form composed of high molecular weight polymers
known as paraformaldehyde.
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51Cont.
- Heated paraformaldehyde generates pure gaseous
formaldehyde which, when dissolved in water,
reverts mostly to the monomeric form. - Aqueous formaldehyde exists principally in the
form of its monohydrate, methylene glycol,
CH2(OH)2, and as low molecular weight polymeric
hydrates or polyoxymethylene glycols. - It has been suggested that the hydrated form,
methylene glycol, is the reactive component of
formaldehyde but this has been disputed.
52Preparation of 10
- Four per cent formaldehyde or 10 buffered
formalin is commonly prepared by adding 100 ml of
40 formaldehyde to 900 ml distilled water with 4
g sodium phosphatase, monobasic and 6.5 g sodium
phosphate, dibasic (anhydrous).
53Formaldehyde solutions
- 10 neutral buffer formalin (4
formaldehyde)REAGENTS REQUIRED1 40
formaldehyde 100 ml2 Distilled water 900 ml3
Sodium dihydrogen orthophosphate 4 g4 Disodium
hydrogen orthophosphate (anhydrous) 6.5 g
(sodium hydrosulphite) - METHODPrepare, using quantities indicated.
Fixation time 24-72 hours
54Buffered formaldehyde-glutaraldehyde 200 mOsm38
- REAGENTS REQUIRED1 -Sodium dihydrogen
orthophosphate 1.6 g2-Sodium hydroxide 0.27
g3-Distilled water 88 ml4-40 formaldehyde 10
ml5-50 glutaraldehyde 2 mlMETHODPrepare,
using quantities indicated. Fixation time 16-24
hours.
55Formol saline
- REAGENTS REQUIRED1- 40 formaldehyde 100 ml2
-Sodium chloride 9 g3 -Tap water 900 ml - METHODPrepare, using quantities indicated
56Some other forms of Fixatives
- Baker's formol-calcium (modified)REAGENTS
REQUIRED1 40 formaldehyde 100 ml2 Distilled
water 900 ml3 10 calcium chloride 100 ml4 7 g
of cadmium chloride is sometimes added to the
mixture - METHODPrepare, using quantities indicated.
Fixation time 16-24 hours. - Formol salineREAGENTS REQUIRED1 40
formaldehyde 100 ml2 Sodium chloride 9 g3 Tap
water 900 ml - METHODPrepare, using quantities indicated.
- Alcoholic formaldehydeREAGENTS REQUIRED1 40
formaldehyde 100 ml2 95 alcohol 900 ml3 0.5 g
calcium acetate may be added to this mixture to
ensure neutrality - METHODPrepare, using quantities indicated.
Fixation time 16-24 hours.
57Fixatives - general usage
- Formalin is used for all routine surgical
pathology and autopsy tissues when an H and E
slide is to be produced. - Formalin is the most forgiving of all fixatives
when conditions are not ideal, and there is no
tissue that it will harm significantly.
58Zenker's fixatives
- Zenker's fixatives are recommended for
reticuloendothelial tissues including - lymph nodes,
- spleen,
- thymus, and
- bone marrow.
- Zenker's fixes nuclei very well and gives good
detail. - However, the mercury deposits must be removed
(dezenkerized) before staining or black deposits
will result in the sections
59Bouin's solution
- Bouin's solution is sometimes recommended for
fixation of - testis,
- GI tract, and
- endocrine tissue.
- It does not do a bad job on hematopoietic tissues
either, and doesn't require dezenkerizing before
staining
60Glutaraldehyde
- Glutaraldehyde is recommended for fixation of
tissues for electron microscopy. - The glutaraldehyde must be cold and buffered and
not more than 3 months old. - The tissue must be as fresh as possible
- Preferably sectioned within the glutaraldehyde at
a thickness no more than 1 mm to enhance fixation
61Alcohols
- Alcohols, specifically ethanol, are used
primarily for cytologic smears. - Ethanol (95) is fast and cheap.
- Since smears are only a cell or so thick, there
is no great problem from shrinkage, and since
smears are not sectioned, there is no problem
from induced brittleness. - Note For fixing frozen sections, you can use
just about anything--though methanol and ethanol
are the best
62Glutaraldehyde
- Glutaraldehyde causes deformation of alpha-helix
structure in proteins so is not good for
immunoperoxidase staining. - However, it fixes very quickly so is good for
electron microscopy. - It penetrates very poorly, but gives best overall
cytoplasmic and nuclear detail. - The standard solution is a 2 buffered
glutaraldehyde
63Glutaraldehyde
- First used in 1962 by Sabatini et al
- Shown to preserve properties of subcellular
structures by EM - Renders tissue autofluorescent so less useful for
fluorescence microscopy, but fluorescence can be
attenuated by NaBH4. - Forms a Schiffs base with amino groups on
proteins and polymerizes via Schiffs base
catalyzed reactions
64- Forms extensive crosslinks - reacts with the
?-amino group of lysine, ?-amino group of amino
acids - reacts with tyrosine, tryptophan,
histidine, phenylalanine and cysteine - Fixes proteins rapidly, but has slow penetration
rate - Can cause cells to form membrane blebs
65Glutaraldehyde
- Supplied commercially as either 25 or 8
solution - Must be careful of the impurities - can change
fixation properties - best product from
Polysciences (Worthington, PA) - As solution ages, it polymerizes and turns
yellow. - Store at -20 C and thaw for daily use. Discard.
66Summary of Formaldehyde
- Crosslinks proteins by forming methelene bridges
between reactive groups - The ratelimiting step is the de-protonation of
amino groups, thus the pH dependence of the
crosslinking - Functional groups that are reactive are amido,
guanidino, thiol, phenol, imidazole and indolyl
groups - Can crosslink nucleic acids
67Cont.
- Therefore the preferred fixative for in situ
hybridization - Does not crosslink lipids but can produce
extensive vesiculation of the plasma membrane
which can be averted by addition of CaCl2 - Not good preservative for microtubules at
physiologic pH
68- Protein crosslinking is slower than for
glutaraldehyde, but formaldehyde penetrates 10
times faster. - It is possible to mix the two and there may be
some advantage for preservation of the 3D nature
of some structures.
69Mercurials
- fix tissue by an unknown mechanism.
- They contain mercuric chloride and include such
well-known fixatives as B-5 and Zenker's. - These fixatives penetrate relatively poorly and
cause some tissue hardness, but are fast and give
excellent nuclear detail.
70- Their best application is for fixation of
hematopoietic and reticuloendothelial tissues. - Since they contain mercury, they must be disposed
of carefully
71Alcohols
- including methyl alcohol (methanol) and ethyl
alcohol (ethanol), are protein denaturants and
are not used routinely for tissues because they
cause too much brittleness and hardness. - However, they are very good for cytologic smears
because they act quickly and give good nuclear
detail. - Spray cans of alcohol fixatives are marketed to
physicians doing PAP smears, but cheap hairsprays
do just as well
72Oxidizing agents
- include permanganate fixatives
- Potassium permanganate,
- dichromate fixatives
- Potassium dichromate,
- Osmium tetroxide.
- They cross-link proteins, but cause extensive
denaturation. - Some of them have specialized applications, but
are used very infrequently.
73Bouins Solution (Picrates)
- include fixatives with picric acid.
- Foremost among these is Bouin's solution.
- It has an unknown mechanism of action.
- It does almost as well as mercurials with nuclear
detail but does not cause as much hardness. - Picric acid is an explosion hazard in dry form.
- As a solution, it stains everything it touches
yellow, including skin.
74On the left with HE staining black mercuric
chloride precipitate is seen in this lymphoma
fixed in B-5 and not properly dezenkerized. This
precipitate is seen on the right under polarized
light microscopy.
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77Removal of Pig
- Formalin pigment
- 1. Dewax the sections, rinse in 100 alcohol,
rinse in 70 alcohol, rinse in distilled water. - 2. Treat in saturated alcoholic picric acid for
30 minutes to 2 hours. - 3. Wash well in running tap water.
- 4. If yellow staining of the section persists
rinse in dilute lithium carbonate. - 5. Rinse in tap water.
- 6. Continue with method.
78Mercury pigment
- 1. Dewax the sections, rinse in 100 alcohol,
rinse in 70 alcohol, rinse in distilled water. - 2. Treat in Lugol's iodine for 2 minutes.
- 3. Decolourise in 5 sodium thiosulphate for 5
minutes. - 4. Wash well in running tap water.
- 5. Continue with method.
79Dichromate pigment
- 1. Dewax the sections, rinse in 100 alcohol,
rinse in 70 alcohol, rinse in distilled water. - 2. Treat in 2 HCl in 70 alcohol 16-24 hours.
- 3. Rinse in tap water.
- 4. Continue with method.
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81Tissue Processing
- Once the tissue has been fixed, it must be
processed into a form in which it can be made
into thin microscopic sections. - The usual way this is done is with paraffin.
- Tissues embedded in paraffin, which is similar in
density to tissue, can be sectioned at anywhere
from 3 to 10 microns, usually 6-8 routinely. - The technique of getting fixed tissue into
paraffin is called tissue processing - Dehydration
- Clearing
82Dehydration
- Wet fixed tissues (in aqueous solutions) cannot
be directly infiltrated with paraffin. - First, the water from the tissues must be removed
by dehydration. - This is usually done with a series of alcohols,
say 70 to 95 to 100. - Sometimes the first step is a mixture of formalin
and alcohol. - Other dehydrants can be used, but have major
disadvantages. - Acetone is very fast, but a fire hazard, so is
safe only for small, hand-processed sets of
tissues. - Dioxane can be used without clearing, but has
toxic fumes
83Clearing
- Removal of the dehydrant with a substance that
will be miscible with the embedding medium
(paraffin). - The commonest clearing agent is xylene.
- Toluene works well, and is more tolerant of small
amounts of water left in the tissues, but is 3
times more expensive than xylene. - Chloroform used to be used, but is a health
hazard, and is slow. - Methyl salicylate is rarely used because it is
expensive, but it smells nice (it is oil of
wintergreen).
84Embedding
- Finally, the tissue is infiltrated with the
embedding agent, almost always paraffin. - Paraffins can be purchased that differ in melting
point, for various hardnesses, depending upon the
way the histotechnologist likes them and upon the
climate (warm vs. cold). - Wax hardness (viscosity) depends upon the
molecular weight of the components and the
ambient temperature. - High molecular weight mixtures melt at higher
temperatures than waxes comprised of lower
molecular weight fractions. - Paraffin wax is traditionally marketed by its
melting points which range from 39C to 68C.
85Other agents
- A product called paraplast contains added
plasticizers that make the paraffin blocks easier
for some technicians to cut. - A vacuum can be applied inside the tissue
processor to assist penetration of the embedding
agent. - methyl methacrylate,
- glycol methacrylate,
- araldite, and epon.
- Methyl methacrylate
86General Embedding Procedure
- METHOD1 Open the tissue cassette, check against
worksheet entry to ensure the correct number of
tissue pieces are present. - 2 Select the mould, there should be sufficient
room for the tissue with allowance for at least a
2 mm surrounding margin of wax. - 3 Fill the mould with paraffin wax.
- 4 Using warm forceps select the tissue, taking
care that it does not cool in the air at the
same time.
87- 5 Chill the mould on the cold plate, orienting
the tissue and firming it into the wax with
warmed forceps. This ensures that the correct
orientation is maintained and the tissue surface
to be sectioned is kept flat. - 6 Insert the identifying label or place the
labelled embedding ring or cassette base onto the
mould. - 7 Cool the block on the cold plate, or carefully
submerge it under water when a thin skin has
formed over the wax surface. - 8 Remove the block from the mould.
- 9 Cross check block, label and worksheet
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90Sectioning tissues
- Turn on the water bath and check that the temp is
35-37ºC. - Use fresh deionized water (DEPC treated water
must be used if in situ hybridization will be
performed on the sections). - Blocks to be sectioned are placed face down on an
ice block or heat sink for 10 minutes. - Place a fresh blade on the microtome.
- Insert the block into the microtome chuck so the
wax block faces the blade and is aligned in the
vertical plane. Set the dial to cut 4-10 µM
sections. - The blade should angled 4-6º.
91- Face the block by cutting it down to the desired
tissue plane and discard the paraffin ribbon. - If the block is ribboning well then cut another
four sections and pick them up with forceps or a
fine paint brush and float them on the surface of
the 37ºC water bath. - Float the sections onto the surface of clean
glass slides. - If the block is not ribboning well then place it
back on the ice block to cool off firm up the
wax. - If the specimens fragment when placed on the
water bath then it may be too hot. - Place the slides with paraffin sections in a 65C
oven for 20 minutes (so the wax just starts to
melt) to bond the tissue to the glass. - Slides can be stored overnight at room
temperature
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95H and E staining
- Hematoxylin is the oxidized product of the
logwood tree known as hematein. - Since this tree is very rare nowadays, most
hematein is of the synthetic variety. - In order to use it as a stain it must be
"ripened" or oxidized. - This can be done naturally by putting the
hematein solution on the shelf and waiting
several months, or by buying commercially ripened
hematoxylin or by putting ripening agents in the
hematein solution.
96Cont.
- Hematoxylin will not directly stain tissues, but
needs a "mordant" or link to the tissues. This is
provided by a metal cat ion such as iron,
aluminum, or tungsten. - The variety of hematoxylins available for use is
based partially on choice of metal ion used. - They vary in intensity or hue. Hematoxylin, being
a basic dye, has an affinity for the nucleic
acids of the cell nucleus.
97Cont.
- Hematoxylin stains are either "regressive" or
"progressive". - With a regressive stain, the slides are left in
the solution for a set period of time and then
taken back through a solution such as
acid-alcohol that removes part of the stain. - This method works best for large batches of
slides to be stained and is more predictable on a
day to day basis. - With a progressive stain the slide is dipped in
the hematoxylin until the desired intensity of
staining is achieved, such as with a frozen
section. - This is simple for a single slide, but lends
itself poorly to batch processing.
98Eosin
- Eosin is an acidic dye with an affinity for
cytoplasmic components of the cell. - There are a variety of eosins that can be
synthesized for use, varying in their hue, but
they all work about the same. - Eosin is much more forgiving than hematoxylin and
is less of a problem in the lab. - About the only problem you will see is
overstaining, especially with decalcified tissues
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100Decalcification
- Some tissues contain calcium deposits which are
extremely firm and which will not section
properly with paraffin embedding owing to the
difference in densities between calcium and
parffin. - Bone specimens are the most likely type here, but
other tissues may contain calcified areas as
well. - This calcium must be removed prior to embedding
to allow sectioning. - A variety of agents or techniques have been used
to decalcify tissue and none of them work
perfectly. - Mineral acids,
- organic acids,
- EDTA, and
- electrolysis have all been used.
101Strong mineral acids
- nitric and
- hydrochloric acids
- rapid
- damage cellular morphology,
- so are not recommended for delicate tissues such
as bone marrow.
102Organic acids
- acetic and
- formic acid are better suited to bone marrow,
since they are not as harsh. - However, they act more slowly on dense cortical
bone. - Formic acid in a 10 concentration is the best
all-around decalcifier. - Some commercial solutions are available that
combine formic acid with formalin to fix and
decalcify tissues at the same time.
103EDTA and Electrolysis
- EDTA can remove calcium and is not harsh (it is
not an acid) - but it penetrates tissue poorly and
- works slowly and is
- expensive in large amounts.
- Electrolysis has been tried in experimental
situations where calcium had to be removed with
the least tissue damage. - It is slow and not suited for routine daily use.
104Procedure
- Specimens should be decalcified in hydrochloric
acid/formic acid working solution 20 times their
volume. - Change to fresh solution each day until
decalcification is complete. - It may take 24 hours up to days or months
depending on size of the specimens. - See below for the testing procedures
- Once the decalcification is complete, rinse
specimens in water briefly and transfer to
ammonia solution to neutralize acids left in
specimens for 30 minutes. - Wash specimens in running tap water thoroughly up
to 24 hours. - Routine paraffin embedding.
105End-Point of Decalcification
- X-ray (the most accurate way)
- Chemical testing (accurate)
- Physical testing (less accurate and
potentially damage of specimen)
106Chemical Test
- 5 Ammonium Hydroxide Stock
- Ammonium hydroxide, 28 --------------------
5 ml - Distilled water -----------------------------
----- 95 ml - Mix well
- 5 Ammonium Oxalate Stock
- Ammonium oxalate ----------------------------
5 ml - Distilled water -----------------------------
---- 95 ml - Mix well
- Ammonium Hydroxide/Ammonium Oxalate Working
Solution - Use equal parts of the 5 ammonium hydroxide
solution and the 5 ammonium oxalate solution.
107Procedure
- Insert a pipette into the decalcifying solution
containing the specimen. - Withdraw approximately 5 ml of the hydrochloric
acid/formic acid decalcification solution from
under the specimen and place it in a test tube. - Add approximately 10 ml of the ammonium
hydroxice/ammonium oxalate working solution, mix
well and let stand overnight. - Decalcification is complete when no precipitate
is observed on two consecutive days of testing.
Repeat this test every two or three days.
108Physical Tests
- The physical tests include bending the specimen
or inserting a pin, razor, or scalpel directly
into the tissue. - The disadvantage of inserting a pin, razor, or
scalpel is the introduction of tears and pinhole
artifacts. - Slightly bending the specimen is safer and less
disruptive but will not conclusively determine if
all calcium salts have been removed. - After checking for rigidity, wash thoroughly
prior to processing. -