Practical 3: H&E and Oil Red O Stain Flashcards

1
Q

What is embedding

A

The process by which tissues are solidified in a wax mould to create the wax block for cutting thin sections using a microtome

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2
Q

Why do we use paraffin wax for moulds

A

It provides a supporting media to enable subsequent sectioning of tissue

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3
Q

What does FFPE stand for

A

Formalin fixed paraffin embedded tissue

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4
Q

What is cryotomy

A

The use of a refrigerated microtome to cut frozen sections of tissue

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5
Q

When is cryotomy used
(5)

A

Lipid staining

Rapid H&E for urgent diagnosis

DNA and/or preservation for molecular analysis by PCR

Special investigations - direct immunofluorescence, enzyme histochemistry, immunohistochemistry

Biobanking - storage for research

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6
Q

Why is cryotomy used in lipid staining

A

Lipids are dissolved out of tissue if they are exposed to the solvents used in paraffin-processing, therefore lipid staining is always performed on frozen tissues

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7
Q

What is the most common lipid stain?

A

Oil Red O

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8
Q

What is Oil Red O

A

A red hydrophobic dye which stains all triglycerides and neutral lipids intensely red

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9
Q

When might you need an Oil Red O stain

A

Disease cases whereby lipids accumulate e.g. liver disease, muscle wasting or lipid storage diseases

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10
Q

Give another stain for lipids other than Oil Red O

A

Sudan Black B

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11
Q

What is the different between Oil Red O and Sudan Black B

A

Sudan Black B stains both hydrophobic and phospholipids black

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12
Q

When might H&E be used with cryotomy?

A

Patient may be having surgery -> need rapid diagnosis of a legion

Excision margin clearance to ensure diseases tissue fully resected

Lymph node clearance in radical surgery - head and neck surgery, radical hysterectomy, axillary clearance for breast cancer

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13
Q

What is the microtome and how is it used (3)

A

A mechanical device which advances a tissue block by a small thickness over a blade, which then slices off the section

This is then floated onto water to flatten and expand the section

The section is then collected onto a labeled slide

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14
Q

Slides of 10-20 microns are used for what?

A

Neurohistology

Lipid staining

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15
Q

Slides of 3-5 microns are used for what

A

Routine light microscope

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16
Q

Slides of 5-8 microns are used for what

A

Frozen section

17
Q

Slides of 0.5 to 3 microns are used for what

A

Semi-thin resin

18
Q

Slides of 60-120 microns are used for what

A

Electron microscopy

19
Q

List the four major components of the microtome

A

Block holder
Knife holder or blade holder
Micrometer gauge
Advancement controls

20
Q

What are the four types of microtome

A

Rotary

Cambridge Rocker

Sledge

Cryostat

21
Q

What is a rotary microtome

A

The most common microtome -> now available as automated microtomes

e.g. Leitz or Jung

22
Q

What is a Cambridge Rocker

A

The first type of microtome -> found only in museums

23
Q

What is a Sledge microtome

A

A sliding microtome

Used for cutting of large tissue samples, whole organisms or whole brain

24
Q

What is a cryostat microtome

A

A freezing microtome for frozen sections

25
Q

What blades are used for microtomy

A

Glass or diamond knives

26
Q

What are microtomy blades usually made of?

A

Steel

Tungsten carbide

Cobalt

Stellite alloys