Acetic acid treatment for wrinkle-free oral mucosal epithelia in paraffin section preparation

For histopathological assessment of oral borderline malignancies, it is important to carefully detect subtle epithelial changes on fully stretched tissue sections. However, it is not generally easy to obtain wrinkle‐free sections when using formalin‐fixed paraffin‐embedded oral mucosal samples. Sinc...

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Veröffentlicht in:Microscopy research and technique 2011-03, Vol.74 (3), p.264-268
Hauptverfasser: Ahsan, MD. Shahidul, Maruyama, Satoshi, Cheng, Jun, Al-Eryani, Kamal, Yamazaki, Manabu, Hasegawa, Mayumi, Tsuneki, Masayuki, Saku, Takashi
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container_title Microscopy research and technique
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creator Ahsan, MD. Shahidul
Maruyama, Satoshi
Cheng, Jun
Al-Eryani, Kamal
Yamazaki, Manabu
Hasegawa, Mayumi
Tsuneki, Masayuki
Saku, Takashi
description For histopathological assessment of oral borderline malignancies, it is important to carefully detect subtle epithelial changes on fully stretched tissue sections. However, it is not generally easy to obtain wrinkle‐free sections when using formalin‐fixed paraffin‐embedded oral mucosal samples. Since acetic acid treatment is already utilized for large brain tissue sections, we examined whether that treatment was also effective for oral mucosal tissues containing normal to malignant epithelial lesions. Paraffin sections were floated in various concentrations of acetic acid for 10 min after stretching in water for 1 min, then wrinkle formations were examined using hematoxylin and eosin staining, as well as for staining intensity with keratin immunohistochemistry. Wrinkles were formed in both epithelial and connective tissue zones of sections treated with less than a 40‐mM (0.25%) concentration of acetic acid. In contrast, treatments with concentrations at 80 mM (0.5%) and higher resulted in cracking between the epithelial layer and lamina propria, as well as poor immunohistochemical results for keratins 13 and 17, even though the wrinkles completely disappeared. These results indicate that 40 mM is the optimal concentration of acetic acid solution to prevent wrinkles in the epithelial layer while maintaining the immunohistochemical qualities of oral mucosa tissue sections, especially those containing borderline malignant epithelial lesions. Microsc. Res. Tech., 2010. © 2010 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/jemt.20900
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Paraffin sections were floated in various concentrations of acetic acid for 10 min after stretching in water for 1 min, then wrinkle formations were examined using hematoxylin and eosin staining, as well as for staining intensity with keratin immunohistochemistry. Wrinkles were formed in both epithelial and connective tissue zones of sections treated with less than a 40‐mM (0.25%) concentration of acetic acid. In contrast, treatments with concentrations at 80 mM (0.5%) and higher resulted in cracking between the epithelial layer and lamina propria, as well as poor immunohistochemical results for keratins 13 and 17, even though the wrinkles completely disappeared. These results indicate that 40 mM is the optimal concentration of acetic acid solution to prevent wrinkles in the epithelial layer while maintaining the immunohistochemical qualities of oral mucosa tissue sections, especially those containing borderline malignant epithelial lesions. Microsc. Res. 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subjects acetic acid
Acetic Acid - metabolism
Biomarkers, Tumor
Citric Acid - metabolism
Connective Tissue - physiology
Epithelium - physiology
Humans
Keratin-13 - chemistry
Keratin-17 - chemistry
Mouth Mucosa - physiology
Mouth Neoplasms - diagnosis
oral mucosa
Paraffin Embedding - methods
paraffin sections
Specimen Handling - methods
squamous epithelium
Tongue - physiology
wrinkle-free
title Acetic acid treatment for wrinkle-free oral mucosal epithelia in paraffin section preparation
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