Topical Aluminum Chloride and Monsel's Solution Block Toluidine Blue Staining in Mohs Frozen Sections: Mechanism and Solution

局部氯化铝和蒙塞尔溶液阻断莫氏冰冻切片中的甲苯胺蓝染色:机理和解决方案

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作者:Curtis L Chen, Steven Wilson, Reza Afzalneia, Chih-Shan Jason Chen

Background

A diminished-staining artifact is observed in some Mohs frozen sections that are stained in toluidine blue (T-blue). Such an artifact, not yet described in the literature, may interfere with a Mohs surgeon's accurate reading. The authors hypothesize that topical hemostatic agents, aluminum chloride, and Monsel's solution are the causative factors.

Conclusion

By rinsing Mohs frozen sections in an EDTA solution before T-blue staining, the authors could prevent hemostatic agent-induced nonstaining. Applying an EDTA wash and restaining the slides can correct the same artifact.

Methods

Leftover Mohs frozen sections and specimens were treated with aluminum chloride or Monsel's solution and processed with routine Mohs histology.

Objective

To evaluate the aforementioned topical hemostatic agents as a potential cause of the nonstaining artifact, to propose the mechanism associated with this phenomenon, and to develop a method to prevent or rectify the problem. Materials and

Results

Nonstaining artifact is reproduced in aluminum chloride or Monsel's solution-treated ex vivo skin specimens. The authors found that ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA), a chelating agent, can reverse the staining blockage. Such a finding suggests that aluminum or ferric cations bind to tissue and subsequently inhibit T-blue from interacting with the tissue. Direct binding of ferric cations to the tissue section is demonstrated with Prussian blue iron staining.

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