March 11, 2014

Slide Review: Thick skin and sun damaged skin

Thick and/or sun damaged skin will appear as a translucent layer of cells outside the epidermis. This section shows scabby, sun damaged tissue, so the layer of cells is rough and uneven. In the mid dermis, the grayish/lavender area is most likely actinic elastosis, or the accumulation of abnormal elastic tissue in the dermis, also a result of sun damage.
This next section shows the thick skin found in the palms of the hand or the soles of the feet. Note that even though the image (courtesy of http://www.dartmouth.edu) points out the "thickened layer of squamous cells," it is not referring to SCC. Healthy squamous cells are a normal part of the superficial epidermis. The outermost squamous cells are heavily keratinized, creating a thick layer of dead cells that protects our hands and feet. 
For comparison, here is a section of normal tissue only a thin layer of dead squamous epithelial cells.


February 6, 2014

Slide Review: Water in the slide

At the end of staining, tissue sections must be fully dehydrated by alcohol before applying Cytoseal. If you rush the process and leave water mixed with the alcohol and glue, the tissue will have strange dark flecks in it. Notice how the tissue in the far lower right corner of this picture is not contaminated as much. The cytoseal was probably dropped directly on that area of tissue.
You will also notice what looks like streams of bubbles. Since cytoseal is toluene-based and toluene is insoluble in water, any water left on the slide will create this cloudy mess of bubbles.

Solution: Recoverslip. Slide off the coverslip. Give the slide a few good swishes in the alcohol, a few drops of glue, and a brand new coverslip. 




January 14, 2014

Moisture will damage the cryo paint

This cryo/truck was parked next to the sprinklers and the water must have soaked into the blanket overnight. At the job the next morning, the cryo looked like this. I'm not sure how it's any different from driving through heavy rain on the way to or from a job but for whatever reason, those sprinklers really did a number on the paint job.

I imagine car washes will do the same thing eventually, so if it's not too much of a hassle:

-Leave the cryo at home when you get your truck washed.
-If there's nowhere to put it at home, you can drop the cryo off at the office and pick it up afterwards.
-You could also just leave the cryo on the truck and wash the truck at home, being careful not to get cryo wet.