Instrumentation: Microtomy Flashcards

(35 cards)

1
Q

Microtomy

A

Cutting thin sections of tissue for microscopic examination

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2
Q

Micron

A

0.001mm (one thousandth of a millimeter)

1uM

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3
Q

Bevel Angle

A

Angle of the cutting edge of the microtome blade

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4
Q

Clearance Angle

A

Angle formed by the intersection of the block face and the cutting facet of the knife
Optimum Angle is 3-8degrees

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5
Q

Function of the flotation bath

A

Used for floating out paraffin ribbons, helps to remove wrinkles

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6
Q

Proper care for microtome

A

Routine maintenance, clean daily, oil according to manufacturer instructions
Keep covered to protect from dust when not in use

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7
Q

Proper care for flotation bath, and temperature

A

Keep temperature 5-10C lower than melting point of your paraffin
Must clean after each block by skimming the surface of the water with a kimwipe to remove debris and contaminants

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8
Q

Rotary Microtome

A

Commonly used in paraffin sectioning, also commonly used inside a cryostat

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9
Q

Sliding Microtome

A

Used for sectioning Celloidin (brain) and large paraffin blocks, not used in routine histology

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10
Q

Ultra Microtome

A

Used in electron microscopy, cuts sections 50-90nM

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11
Q

Clinical Freezing Microtome/Cryostat

A

Obtains free floating sections (no ribbons) required for some special stains

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12
Q

Safety precautions when disposing of blades

A

All blades are discarded in red puncture proof sharps containers

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13
Q

Crooked Ribbons

A

Block and blade are not parallel, also uneven chilling of the block

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14
Q

Too Thick Sections

A

Incorrect clearance angle, too high or low

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15
Q

Too Thin Sections

A

Incorrect clearance angle, too high or low

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16
Q

Compressed Sections

A
Dull blade
paraffin sticking behind the blade
too little clearance angle
too rapid cutting
too warm room
17
Q

Venetian Blind Effect/Chatter

A

Over-dehydration of the tissue
Dull blade
too high clearance angle
too fast cutting

18
Q

Knife Marks

A

Dull or damaged blade, move to a new section or new blade

19
Q

Failure to form a Ribbon

A

Dull blade
Paraffin too sticky or too hard
Decrease clearance angle
Room temperature

20
Q

Holes in the Ribbons

A

Facing too aggressively, air bubbles during embedding or processing

21
Q

Block is Sectioning Unevenly

A

Nonparallel orientation of chuck/block relative to blade

22
Q

Scratches in the ribbon

A

Nicks in the blade, move to a new spot or new blade

Or calcium deposits, use surface decal

23
Q

Skipped Sections

A

Check tightness of screws and clamps?

24
Q

Washboarding

A

Typical in uterus and other dry/over-hardened tissues. Soak for a long time to try and rehydrate
Also check that all clamps and screws are properly tightened

25
Section Fly Away
Static, wipe down microtome with dryer sheet, increase humidity in room, or breeze caused by air vents or people walking by/breathing
26
Thick/Thin Sections
Too much or too little blade tilt; adjust clearance angle
27
Section lifts from blade
dull blade too little blade tilt too soft paraffin
28
Case Study: Possible Causes? Quality Control Slide Acceptable Inconsistent staining on your slides, different colors
Thick/thin sectioning Cut too thick Check microtome to make sure thickness is consistent and at correct setting
29
Case Study: How to fix? | Breast core biopsy is shredding, contains micro-calcifications
Brief surface decal of approx 30 minutes, then re-attempt to section If it is a research specimen check to see if they are specifically looking for calcium; if that is the case just soak the block longer and do your best to get a section
30
Can't get a ribbon while sectioning, what are 5 potential causes?
``` blade angle block isn't cold enough dull blade paraffin is too hard/high melting point sections are too thick ```
31
Crooked ribbons, why? blade is undamaged block has been evenly chilled
non-parallel orientation of chuck relative to blade | make sure you faced and sectioned the block in the same orientation
32
Static issues, 3 ways to fix
get a huididfier in the lab or your work station wipe down your hands and microtome with a dryer sheet lower the heat in the room keep your forceps cold in your ice-bath wet gauze and keep it behind the blade holder to increase humidity
33
Cutting bloody tissue (spleen, lymph node, currettings, placenta) that is shredding You soaked it and got a fresh blade, but its still shredding What next?
Warm the block 30 seconds, cold water, then cut again May need to repeat this process several times Warm the block with your thumb
34
You are cutting fatty tissue and it explodes in the water bath. Why and how to fix?
Water bath is too warm, turn it down/add a little ice to rapidly cool Under-processed tissue, reprocess Melt down, squeeze out excess xylene with a paper towel and re-embed
35
You keep getting knife marks, even with fresh blades | Why and how to fix?
Bad lot of blades, manufacturing defect, get a new case of blades or try another brand calcium deposits in the block keep damaging your new blades, do surface decal then re-cut staples missed during grossing, will cause bad noise while sectioning cartilage/bone present