Fresh Tissue Examination: Mark Lester B. Cauan, RMT
Fresh Tissue Examination: Mark Lester B. Cauan, RMT
Fresh Tissue Examination: Mark Lester B. Cauan, RMT
⚫Streaking
⚫ with an applicator stick or platinum loop,
the material is rapidly and gently applied in a
direct or zigzag line throughout the slide,
attempting to obtain a relatively uniform
distribution of secretion.
⚫Too thin or too thick smears have to be
avoided, since they make the tissues
unsuitable for examination.
Smear preparation
Spreading
⚫A selected portion of the material is transferred to a
clean slide and gently spread into a moderately
thick fil by teasing the mucous strands apart with
an applicator stick.
⚫More tedious than streaking, but has the advantage
of maintaining cellular interrelationships of the
material to be examined.
⚫Recommended for smear preparations of fresh
sputum and bronchial aspirates, and also for thick
mucoid secretions
Smear preparation
⚫Touch imprint (impression smear)
⚫The surface of a freshly cut piece if tissue is
brought into contact and pressed on to the surface
of a clean glass slide, allowing the cells to be
transferred directly to the slide for examination by
phase contrast microscopy or stained for light
microscopic study.
⚫It has the edge of added advantage in that the cells
may be examined without destroying their actual
intercellular relationship and without separating
them from their normal surrounding.
Smear preparation
Pull-Apart
⚫Done by placing a drop of secretions or sediment
upon one slide and facing it to another clean slide.
The material disperses evenly over the surface of
the two slides
⚫Slight movement of the two slides are necessary to
initiate the flow of materials.
⚫The two slides are then pulled apart with a single
uninterrupted motion, and the specimen placed
under the microscope for immediate examination,
or applied with vital stain.
⚫Useful for thick secretions such as serous fluids,
concentrated sputum, enzymatic lavage samples
METHODS OF FRESH TISSUE
EXAMINATION
⚫Frozen section
⚫Utilized when rapid diagnosis of the tissue in question is
required, and is recommended when lipids and nervous
tissue elements are to be demonstrated.
⚫Very thin slices, around 10-15µ in thickness are cut from
a fresh tissue frozen on a microtome with CO2 or on
cryostat, a cold chamber kept at an atmospheric
temperature of -10 to -20 C .
⚫The frozen sections are then transferred to a slide, and
processed for light microscopic study.
Uses of frozen section