Module 2 Histopathology
Module 2 Histopathology
Module 2 Histopathology
• Fixation
• Decalcification (optional) – process of removing calcium from decalcified tissue, making
suitable for section cutting.
• Dehydration
• Clearing
• Infiltration (Impregnation)
• Embedding
• Trimming
• Section-Cutting (microtomy)
• Staining
• Mounting
• Labelling
Fixation
• technique of making the very thin slices of tissue specimens for the
microscopic examination.
• Microtome
Staining
• S-20-0001
• P-20-0001
II. Histochemistry
• To provide color and contrast to microscopic images. The field uses disparate techniques to accomplish
the specific labeling of biological structures. Histochemists pioneered the use of small-molecule
cellular stains, labeled molecules such as antibodies, and enzyme-mediated detection and signal
amplification.
• Presentation of Normal Chemical Distribution: The substance being analyzed must not diffuse away
from its original site.
• Presentation of Normal Chemical Composition: The procedure must not block or denature the reactive
chemical groups being analyzed, or change normally non-reactive groups into reactive groups.
• Specificity of the Reaction: The method should be highly specific for the substance or chemical groups
being analyzed, to avoid false-positive results.
• Detectability of the Reaction Product: The reaction product should be colored or electron scattering,
so that it can be visualized easily with a light or electron microscope.
• Insolubility of the Reaction Product: The reaction product should be insoluble, so that it remains in
close proximity to the substance it marks
Iron : PRUSSIAN BLUE REACTION - MALLORY'S METHOD
• Principle: The reaction occurs with the treatment of sections in acid solutions of
ferrocyanides. Any ferric ion (+3) in the tissue combines with the ferrocyanide and results
in the formation of a bright blue pigment called 'Prussian blue" or ferric ferrocyanide.
• Procedures: 1)Deparaffinize and hydrate to distilled water 2) *Working solution, *
microwave, 30 seconds. Allow slides to stand in
solution for 5 minutes, in the fume hood 3)Rinse in distilled water 4) Nuclear-fast red,
5 minutes 5) Wash in tap water 6) Dehydrate, clear, and coverslip.
*Conventional method: room temperature for 30 minutes.
RESULTS: Iron (hemosiderin) blue/Nuclei red/Background pink
• Reagents:
• 5% Potassium Ferrocyanide: Potassium ferrocyanide 25.0 gm, Distilled water 500.0
ml
• 5% Hydrochloric Acid: Hydrochloric acid, conc. 25.0 ml, Distilled water 475.0 ml
• Working Solution: 5% potassium ferrocyanide 25.0 ml, 5% hydrochloric acid 25.0
ml
• Stains: Perl’s prussian blue stain, Lillie’s Method for ferric and ferrous iron,
gomori’s PB stain, Turnbull’s stain
• Clinical significance:To demonstrate ferric iron in tissue sections. Small amounts
of iron are found normally in spleen and bone marrow. Excessive amounts are
present in hemochromatosis, with deposits found in the liver and pancreas,
hemosiderosis, with deposits in the liver, spleen, and lymph nodes.
• to indicate levels of iron storage and may provide reliable evidence of iron deficiency.
Copper
• Principle: The reaction utilizes the property of copper to bind with high affinity to protein copper deposits in tissue
sections.
• Procedures: 1) Take sections to water 2) Incubate in the rhodanine working solution for 3 hours at 56°C or
overnight in a 37°C oven 3) Rinse well in several changes of distilled water 4) Stain in dilute Mayer
hematoxylin for 10 minutes 5) Briefly rinse in distilled water and place immediately in borax solution for l
0 seconds 6) Rinse well in distilled water 7) Mount with Apathy's mounting media.
• Results: Copper and copper associated protein red to orange-red Nuclei blue, Bile green
• Reagents: Rhodanine Stock Solution: 5-p-Dimethylaminobenzidine rhodanine 0.05 gm, Absolute ethanol 25
ml
• Prepare fresh and filter prior to use.
• Rhodanine Working Solution: Rhodanine stock solution 5 ml, 2% Sodium acetate trihydrate 45 ml
• Borax Solution: Disodium tetraborate 0.5 gm, Distilled water 100 ml
• Stains: Lindquist's rhodanine method, Timm’s silver. Orcein, rubeanic acid and counterstain: Mayer or
Lillie- Mayer hematoxyli, and Harris hematoxylin
• Clinical significance: Wilson’s dse, primary biliary cirrhosis, other liver dse.
Calcium salts
• Principle: Calcium salts of phosphates and carbonates in tissues are stained deep purplish blue in routine
hematoxylin and eosin. Because calcium oxalate is birefringent, it can be identified easily by polarization. The
other calcium salts are not birefringent and will not polarize.
• Procedures: 1. Deparaffinize and hydrate to distilled water. Rinse well in distilled water 2) Place in Silver
nitrate solution and expose to strong light for 10 to 20 minutes. If the day is overcast longer incubation
will be necessary. Checkthe slides periodically and stop the reaction when the calcium salts are brown-
black 3) Rinse sections in distilled water 4) Place slides in 5% sodium thiosulfate for 2 to 3 minutes 5)
Wash slides in distilled water 6) Counterstain in nuclear fast red for 5 minutes 7) Wash sections well in
water. 8) Dehydrate and clear in 2 changes each of 95% alcohol, absolute alcohol, and xylene 9) Mount
with synthetic resin.
• Results: Mineralized bone Black, Osteoid Red, Nuclei blue
• Reagents: 5 % aqueous silver nitrate, 5 % Sodium thiosulfate, 1 % Neutral Fast Red, Neutral Fast Red 0.5
gm
• Stains:Von kossa’s, Alizarin red S, Calcium dye lake rxn, Azan stain
• Clinical significance: Abnormal deposits of calcium phosphate or carbonate can be associated with
necrotic tissue in lesions of atherosclerosis, hyperparathyroidism, nephrocalcinosis, sarcoidosis,
tuberculosis, and in some tumors.
Urates
• Principle: Sodium urate crystals can be visualized on a hematoxylin & eosin (H&E) stained slide under a polarized light
with a red compensator. The urates will demonstrate a negative yellow or blue birefringence, based on the alignment of
the urate crystals.
• Procedures: 1) Deparaffinize to Xylene and rinse with 3 changes of absolute alcohol.
• 2. Place slides in preheated working methenamine silver.
• 3. Incubate for 30 minutes at 60ºC.
• 4. Rinse sections is distilled water.
• 5. Tone with 0.1% Gold Chloride for 5 minutes.
• 6. Give sections 4 or 5 rinses of distilled water.
• 7. 3% Sodium Thiosulfate for 5 minutes.
• 8. Wash in tap water for 5 minutes.
• 9. Rinse in distilled water.
• Reagents: Methenamine-Silver Nitrate Stock Solution, Methenamine-Silver Nitrate Working Solution
• Stains: Gomori’s Methenamine silver stain, deGalantha stain
• Clinical significance: gout, poor kidney function, kidney stones and arthritis, Chondrocalcinosis
Argentaffin granules
• Principle: cells can reduce the silver salts to metallic silver (brownish-black) color without the aid of reducing agent.
• Procedures: 1. Deparaffinize and hydrate to distilled water.
• 2. *Working Silver Solution, microwave 20 power, 2 minutes. Check
• slides microscopically for adequate intensity, place in microwave a
• few seconds longer if needed.
• 3. Rinse in distilled water.
• 4. 0.1% Gold chloride, 10 minutes.
• 5. Rinse in distilled water.
• 6. 5% Hypo, five minutes.
• 7. Wash in tap water, rinse in distilled.
• 8. Nuclear-fast red, 5 minutes.
• 9. Wash in tap water.
• 10. Dehydrate, clear, and coverslip. Conventional Method: Place in 60°C oven for 1 hour.
• Reagents: Ammoniacal Silver Stock Solution, Ammoniacal Silver Working Solution, 10% silver nitrate, 0.1% gold chloride, 5% hypo
• Stains: azo (diazonium salts), Fontana-Masson, Schmorl’s, Autofluorescence
• Clinical significance: Carcinoid Tumours
Dehydrogenases
• Principle: copper-yielding cytochrome complex that catalyzes the oxidation of ferrocytochrome c to produce
ferricytochrome c and 2H2O.
• Procedures:
• 1. Place coverslips in the incubating solution in a columbia staining dish (Thomas Scientific for 60 minutes at room
temperature.
• Principle: In one staining method, α-naphthyl acetate is enzymatically hydrolyzed, liberating a free naphthol
compound. This then couples with a diazonium compound, forming dark brown-red or black colored deposits at
sites of non-specific esterase activity.
• Procedures: α- Napththyl acetate method
• 1. After suitable fixation, bring sections to water.
• 2. Incubate sections in incubating medium at 37°C for 2 to 20 minutes.
• 3. Wash in running water.
• 4. Counterstain in 2% methyl green (chloroform extracted).
• 5. Wash well in tap water.
• 6. Dehydrate rapidly through fresh alcohol to xylene and mount in DPX.
• Results: Esterase reddish brown, Nuclei green
• Reagents: sodium nitrite, buffer sol’n, incubating medium, Pararosanillin HCL stock, subs sol'n
• Stains: NSE
• Clinical significance: myophagocytosis, Denerveted myofibers, Macrophages in inflammatory myositis,
Myofasciitis.
Chloro-acetate esterase
• Principle: Chloroacetate is enzymatically hydrolyzed by "specific esterase," liberating a free naphthol compound. This then couples with a
diazonium compound, forming highly colored deposits at sites of enzyme activity.
• Procedures:
• 1. Fix cryostat section in buffered formalin or take paraffin sections to water.
• 2. In a 50 ml beaker take 4 drops 4% Pararosanilin hydrochloride solution, add 4 drops freshly prepared 4% Na nitrite solution, and mix fo 1
min. The mixture should turn straw colored.
• 3. Add 20 ml Veronal acetate buffer solution pH 9.1 adjust to pH 6.3 using N HCl.
• 4. Weigh out 0.01g Naphthol AS-D chloroacetate and dissolve in 0.5 ml Dimethyl formamide.
• 5. Add this solution to the Pararosanilin/Buffer mixture, the resulting solution should turn flocculent pale pink in color.
• 6. Filter onto slides and leave 20-30 min at room temperature.
• 7. Wash in water.
• 8. Lightly counterstain with Hematoxylin.
• 9. Wash in water, do not differentiate, blue in Scott’s tap water.
• 10. Dehydrate clear and mount in Permount.
• Results: Chloroacetate esterase activity reddish brown, Nuclei blue
• Reagents: veronal acetate sock and buffer, basic fuchsin sol’n
• Stains: CE stain
• Clinical significance: Myelomonocytic leukemia
Acetyl cholinesterase
• Principle: an enzyme present in nervous tissue, muscle, and red blood cells that catalyzes the hydrolysis of
acetylcholine to choline and acetic acid.
• Procedures:
• 1. Incubate in solution a. at 37ƒC for 15-120 minutes.
• 2. Rinse in distilled water.
• 3. Counterstain in Hematoxylin.
• 4. Dehydrate, clear. Mount sections in DPX
• Results: Cholinesterase activity Red/brown.
• Reagents: incubating sol’n: Acetyl thiocholine iodide 5mg, 0.1M acetate buffer (pH.6.0) 6.5ml, 0.1m
sodium citrate (2.94g/100ml) 0.5ml, 30mM copper sulphate (0.58g/100ml) 1.0ml, Distilled water 1.0ml,
5mM potassium ferricyanide
• Stains: AchE stain
• Clinical significance: neural tube defects, congenital absence of colonic ganglion cells, Hirschsprung’s
disease.
Mono amine oxidase
• Principle: phosphorylase catalyzes the breakdown of glucose-1 phosphate to glucose and phosphate ions.
The glucose is subsequently stained with iodine to give a purple color.
• Procedures:
• 1. Incubate in solution at 37 oC for 90 minutes.
• 2. Wash in 40% ethanol for 5 seconds; air dry.
• 3. Fix in ethanol for 3 minutes; air dry.
• 4. Wash in 1:30 Lugol’s iodine for 5 minutes.
• 5. Mount in 9:1 glycerine jelly/Lugol’s iodine.
• Results: Phosphorylase activity blue/black
• Reagents: 0.1 M acetate buffer, pH 5.9 100 ml, 0.1 M magnesium chloride 10 ml, Glucose-1-
phosphate 1 gm, Glycogen (oyster/rabbit liver) 20 mg, ATP salt 50 mg, Sodium fluoride 1.8 gm,
Ethanol 20 ml, Polyvinyl pyrrolidine 9 gm
• Stains: phosphorylase stain
• Clinical significance: McArdle’s disease
Aldolase
• Principle: based on the fact that the enzyme splits hexose diphosphate into
two molecules of triose phosphate. The latter hydrolyzes spontaneously at an
alkaline reaction, and the phosphate liberated is visualized much as in the
regular method for alkaline phosphatase.
• Procedures:
• Reagents:lodoacetate and fluoride, etc.
• Stains:
• Clinical significance: muscle or Liver damage
Sulfatase