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Histotechnology

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Cytopathology. Haematology. Forensic Pathology. Immunology. Chemical Pathology. Genetics ... Cytopathology: Cytopathology is study of cells in diagnosis of disease. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Histotechnology


1
"You are your own raw material. When you know
what you consist of and what you want to make of
it, then you can invent yourself." - Warren B.
Bennis
2
Man is the maker of his own happiness..
3
Introduction
  • Study(logos) of suffering(pathos).
  • Scientific Study of Disease
  • Foundation to clinical practice.
  • Why, How, What happens.
  • Sequential analysis to diagnosis.

4
HISTO-PATHOLOGYIntroduction Techniques
Dr. Venkatesh M. Shashidhar. Senior Lecturer in
Pathology Fiji School of Medicine
5
Study of Disease (Pathology)
  • Epidemiology
  • Etiology - Causes
  • Pathogenesis - Evolution
  • Morphology - Structural Changes
  • Clinical Significance Functional Changes
  • Management
  • Complications
  • Prevention

6
Four aspects of Pathology
  • Etiology - Study of Causes
  • Pathogenesis - Step by step evolution
  • Morphology - Structural Changes
  • Clinical Significance

7
Branches of clinical Pathology
  • Histopathology
  • Cytopathology
  • Haematology
  • Forensic Pathology
  • Immunology
  • Chemical Pathology
  • Genetics
  • Toxicology
  • Microbiology

Anatomic Pathology
8
Learning Pathology
  • General Pathology
  • Common changes in tissues.
  • Systemic Pathology
  • Specific changes in organs.

9
Techniques in Pathology
  • Gross Pathology
  • Light Microscopy
  • Histopathology, Cytology, Autopsy
  • Histochemistry, Biochemical
  • Immunohistochemistry
  • Electron Microscopy
  • Cell Cultures, Medical Microbiology
  • Molecular Pathology

10
Histo-Pathology
  • Dr. Venkatesh M. Shashidhar
  • Senior Lecturer in Pathology
  • Fiji School of Medicine

11
HISTOTECHNOLOGY
  • The technique of processing the tissues
    submitted for histopathological study until the
    preparation of the stained section on a glass
    microscopic slide ready for study is known as
    Histotechnology
  • And persons specializing in this technique are
    known as Histotechnologists.

12
Surgical Specimen
  • Clinical Details
  • Adequate specimen
  • Proper Fixative
  • 110 proportion
  • 10 buffered Formalin

13
Garbage in ? Garbage out !
14
Gross Examination
  • Description
  • Specimen weight measurement (approx)
  • Consistency
  • Photo
  • Cut section

15
Taking Samples
  • Edge of lesions.
  • Wall of cysts.
  • Include normal areas.
  • Avoid necrotic area.
  • Whole specimen if small.
  • Direction, mark

16
Inking the Margins
  • To mark surgical margin.
  • Spread of lesion
  • Malignancy
  • Adequacy of removal
  • Different colors to identify margins

17
Fixation
  • Specimen bits are placed in porous cassettes
  • Not more than 5mm thick
  • In 10 formalin
  • 1mm/hour fixation
  • 6 hour

18
Fixation
  • After fixation is Replacing aqueous formalin
    with alcohol in gradual sequence (70, 95, 100)
    to make way for paraffin.

19
Clearing
  • Removal of alcohol with xylene that will be
    miscible with the embedding medium (paraffin)
  • Impregnating with paraffin.

20
Embedding
  • Paraffin block with embedded tissue
  • consistency to cut
  • Paraffin blocks taken for sectioning

21
Tissue Processing
  • Preservative
  • Provides stability
  • Protects from infection
  • Prevents autolysis
  • Permits sectioning and staining

22
Sectioning
  • Microtome
  • 3-10 microns
  • Ribbon of sections
  • taken on hot water bath

23
Picking up sections
  • Floating sections onto slides
  • Common float artefact

24
Microscope slide preparation
  • Taking the section onto slide
  • Flat, no air bubbles, no stretch or breaks.

25
Automated Staining
  • Routine stain HE
  • Hematoxylin (basic)
  • Eosin (acidic)
  • Nucleus is acidic and cytoplasm is relatively
    basic
  • Special stains

26
Coverslipping
  • Clearing - xylene
  • Thin glass coverslips to protect the section
  • Using mounting media (Eg. DPX, Resins, Canada
    balsam etc.)

27
Reporting
  • Additional sections
  • Deeper / Thinner sect.
  • Special Stains/tech.
  • Reference..
  • Discussions with Clin.
  • Diagnosis
  • Report Typing
  • Despatch.
  • (gt3-5 days)

28
Cytopathology
  • Cytopathology is study of cells in diagnosis of
    disease.
  • Exfoliative Non-Exfoliative - cytology.
  • Exfoliative Cell samples are collected from
    normally shedding tissues like epithelium.
    spatula or brush to enhances collection.
  • Non-Exfoliative Cells samples collected by
    needles with suction pressure. (FNAC)

29
PAP Smear Normal
30
PAP Smear - Abnormal
31
Nearly all men can stand adversity, but if you
want to test a man's character, give him
power..!  Abraham Lincoln
32
Special Techniques
33
Light Microscopy
  • Kohler Illumination
  • Condenser
  • Objectives
  • 2 to 4x - Low power
  • 100x lens Oil Imm.
  • Eye piece of 10x and objective of 40x 400 times
    magnification.

34
Normal Stomach
35
Normal Skin
36
Normal Skeletal Muscle
37
Normal Kidney
38
Summary
  • Grossing
  • Fixation
  • Processing
  • Embedding
  • Sectioning
  • Staining
  • Mounting

39
To recognize ones own weakness and errors and
draw back from them is the only way towards
perfection
40
Some Special Techniques
41
Frozen Sections
  • Freezing acts as embedding agent by forming
    minute ice crystals within cells.
  • More rapid (5min),
  • Liquid nitrogen.

Freezing Microtome
42
Immunohistochemistry
  • Antigen antibody reaction
  • Ab Tagged with marker
  • Simple Dye
  • Enzyme (peroxidase)
  • Fluorescent Dye
  • Radioactive Dye

Marker Sec. Antibody Pri. Antibody Tissue
Antigen
43
Melanoma ve for HMB-45
44
B cell Lymphoma CD20
45
Breast Cancer Estrogen Receptor Antigen
Tamoxifen Sensitive
46
Polarized Microscopy
  • Under Polarized light, Some materials have the
    property of "birefringence" which is the ability
    to pass light in a particular plane.
  • Eg. Crystals, fat, fibers. Amyloid etc.

47
Cardiac Amyloidosis
48
Urine Oval Fat Bodies
49
Fluorescent Microscopy
  • Property of materials that causes them to absorb
    light at a shorter (UV) wavelength, and to emit
    light at a higher (visible) wavelength
  • Auto-Fluorescence
  • Immuno-Fluorescence

50
ANA Diffuse Pattern
51
ANA Nucleolar Pattern
52
Electron Microscopy
  • Electron beam instead of light.
  • Magnified images are typically from 1000X to
    50,000X. (Light microscope is 10-1000x).
  • Gluteraldehyde fixative.
  • Glass knives.
  • Specimen is mounted on a metal grid.

53
Membranous GN
54
Minimal Change GN
55
"Real knowledge is to know the extent of ones
ignorance." -- Confucius
56
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