Liz Buchanan BVSc MRCVS
Keymaster
Hello and thank you for persevering with this interesting question that I've never been asked before! So... when we take a biopsy, the sample will often be soaked in fixative (to stop the cells 'going off') and sent to a lab, who will then use a machine called a microtome to slice up the sample. The slices have to be incredibly thin - no more than a few cells thick - to make a good microscope slide, through which light can pass. This requires extremely delicate equipment. Unfortunately, some samples have deposits of some mineralised 'grit' in them, which the delicate 'slicing' technology can't handle. Its probably like trying to cut slices of ham of a perfect thickness with a perfectly sharp knife, when the ham has bones embedded at unknown intervals. When we're calving ham, it doesnt really matter if the slices are imperfect, but with tissues at this thickness, the lab will want to break down that mineral, in order to be able to cut the sample precisely. Its a request I've had several times over my careeer. Some of those samples have turned out to be cancerous - because cancers do often have calcium desposits within them. However, that's not always the case; mineral deposits also form in the tissues for other reasons eg an excess of mineral in the body, or kidney or bladder stones.
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