I'll note that we have used glass coverslips in histology forever but are 
switching to tape not for the speed (though that is appreciated) but because 
the tape dries instantly and can be put in a slide scanner right away, while 
glass slides cannot until dry enough - takes a lot longer. In fact, we were 
cutting tape strips down to use as coverslips for FS slides so we could scan 
right away for remote Dx while the OR was waiting. 

The taped slides scan fine and the images are fine. 

The primary complaint about taped slides is that the tape scratches and so 
makes microscopy a bit more difficult, and we pull slides constantly for 
various conferences. However, with scanned images it makes no difference. The 
slides are scanned when the tape is pristine, stored and rarely pulled again. 

Tim Morken
Supervisor, Electron Microscopy/Neuromuscular Special Studies
Department of Pathology
UC San Francisco Medical Center

-----Original Message-----
From: Terri Braud via Histonet [mailto:histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] 
Sent: Thursday, March 14, 2019 12:10 PM
To: 'histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu'
Subject: [Histonet] Stainer vs. Stainer

Hi Alison - 
I've used both stainers and like both of them a lot.  Both were super reliable 
and easy to use.  However, coverslipping is a different story.
I've used both film and glass.  About film - super quick, super easy, but - the 
purity of the xylene used to coverslip from film must be absolute. Anyone who 
has experienced film pulling off the slides in storage had a miniscule portion 
of water carried down the acohols and into the xylene. If it were glass, the 
process is a bit more forgiving of water contaminent. The absolute alcohols 
leading to the end xylenes must be kept very fresh.  I kept film slides for 
over 20 years, no problem.  If you are looking into digital pathology, I would 
check with vendors to see if film is acceptable.  I don't know.
As to coverslippers, we've been using the Sakura glass now for 10 years and 
love it.  I can't compare it to the newer Leica Glass, but 10 years ago my 
techs all preferred the Sakura because it had fewer moving parts and the 
maintenance was easier.  I hope this helps.  Good Luck, Terri

Terri L. Braud, HT(ASCP)
Anatomic Pathology Supervisor
Laboratory
Holy Redeemer Hospital
1648 Huntingdon Pike
Meadowbrook, PA 19046
ph: 215-938-3689
fax: 215-938-3874
Care, Comfort, and Heal

   6. stainer v. stainer (Perl , Alison)
   
Message: 6
Date: Wed, 13 Mar 2019 20:08:14 +0000
From: "Perl , Alison" <ap...@cmmedical.com>
To: "'histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu'"
        <histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu>
Subject: [Histonet] stainer v. stainer


Hi all
We are getting ready to purchase a new H&E stainer/coverslipper, and are 
considering the Sakura Prisma Plus (tape) and the Leica Spectra (glass). Does 
anyone have good or bad feedback on either instrument, and/or tape v. glass? 
We've always had glass, but of course the coverslippers need more maintenance, 
take longer to dry, more expensive than tape, etc etc. So we are very 
interested in tape, but still a little hesitant about the old problems of 
yellowing and peeling after 10+ years. Since we're in NY, we have to keep all 
slides for 20 years....

Any thoughts are appreciated!

Alison Perl, HTL(ASCP)CM
Anatomic Pathology Manager
CareMount Medical
110 South Bedford Rd
Mount Kisco, NY 10549
(914) 302-8424
ap...@cmmedical.com<mailto:ap...@cmmedical.com>
https://protect2.fireeye.com/url?k=0a167f0a-5656125c-0a165817-0cc47adb57f0-ef5d177b74bfb01b&u=http://www.caremountmedical.com/<https://protect2.fireeye.com/url?k=7d5d1c43-211d7115-7d5d3b5e-0cc47adb57f0-5bf74e266e70326a&u=http://www.caremountmedical.com/>



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