[Histonet] Water bath temperature

Marshall Terry Dr, Consultant Histopathologist Terry.Marshall <@t> rothgen.nhs.uk
Mon Feb 14 11:16:44 CST 2005


Why from the description is it not just our old friend pink disease? (BayleyJH {1949}J.Path.BAct., 61,448)
Are the polka dots too small or too many or too invariable, or any combination thereof?
As usual, a picture would be worth a thousand words.

She wore an itsy bitsy teeny weeny polka dot bikini .......
I was never sure if it was the polka dots that were teeny weeny. 
Probably not.

Dr Terry L Marshall, B.A.(Law), M.B.,Ch.B.,F.R.C.Path
 Consultant Pathologist
 Rotherham General Hospital
 South Yorkshire
 England
        terry.marshall <@t> rothgen.nhs.uk

-----Original Message-----
From: Rebecca Barnhart [mailto:RBARNHART <@t> summithealth.org]
Sent: 11 February 2005 19:24
To: histonet <@t> lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: [Histonet] Water bath temperature


We were having a problem that the tissue would not take up the
hematoxlyin but would take up the eosin but only in some areas, so it
looked like polka dots.  We started one by one changing solution trying
to figure out where it was coming from.  We had all fresh solutions and
still had polka dots.  I tried the only other thing left to change, I
lowered the temperature of the water bath from 45 to 38 and this worked.
 We currently are using ParaPlast Xtra with a melting point of 52.  We
have all tried figure out why the temperature in the water bath will
make the difference.  Several times I have cut the same tissue at
different temperatures ranging from 38 - 45 and every time there are
polka dots at the higher temperatures.  Does anyone have any idea why
this would be?  

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