[Histonet] GI biopsies
Paula
plucas at biopath.org
Wed Feb 11 14:46:56 CST 2026
Dear Colleagues,
Im reaching out to the group to ask for input regarding microscopic folds
in GI biopsy sections. Im hoping for some tricks of the trade
suggestions.
In our lab, sections appear flat and well-relaxed on the water bath with no
visible gross folds. However, after H&E staining, the pathologist identifies
epithelial microfolds in small GI biopsies (esophagus, stomach, colon).
These are not visible before staining and are occurring across multiple
techs.
We currently use Leica Paraplast Plus (polymer-enhanced paraffin). We have
reviewed and optimized:
Embedding orientation (flat, mucosa aligned)
Water bath temperature and float time
Blade angle and cutting speed
Section thickness (4 µm)
Despite this, we continue to see post-stain microfolding.
For those of you who cut a high volume of GI biopsies:
· Have you found certain paraffins perform better (e.g., low-melt,
non-polymer)?
· Do you run a different water bath temperature specifically for GI?
· Any tricks of the trade for minimizing epithelial compression
that arent in the textbooks?
I would greatly appreciate any practical advice or shared experience. Thank
you in advance for your insights.
Best regards,
Paula Lucas
Histology Laboratory/BioPath Medical Group
We are doing a lot more GI cases, and were experiencing complaints from the
pathologist about folds. There are microscopic and are interfering with
taking images.
Can someone recommend tricks to the trade of minimizing these folds in the
sections?
Thank you in advance,
Paula
BioPath Medical Group
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