Dictionary Definition
histological adj : of or relating to histology
[syn: histologic]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Adjective
- Pertaining to histology.
Extensive Definition
Histology (from the Greek ) is
the study of the microscopic
anatomy of cells and
tissues
of plants and animals. It is performed by
examining a thin slice of tissue under a light
microscope. Histology is an essential tool of biology and medicine.
Histopathology,
the microscopic study of diseased tissue, is an important tool in
anatomical
pathology, since accurate diagnosis of cancer and other diseases usually
requires histopathological examination of samples.
The trained scientists who perform the
preparation of histological sections are histotechnicians,
histology technicians (HT), histology technologists (HTL), medical
scientists,
medical laboratory technicians, or biomedical
scientists. Their field of study is called
histotechnology.
Technical procedure
Fixation
Fixatives and Preservatives are used to preserve the tissue, the structures of the cell, and the cell organelles found in the individual cells (e.g., nucleus, rough endoplasmic reticulum,and mitochondria). The tissues are mechanically and biochemically stabilized in a fixative. The most common fixative is neutral buffered formalin (10% formaldehyde in Phosphate buffered saline (PBS)). It is important to consider that a fixative should not be too toxic to its handler, and it should not damage the tissue being preserved.Processing
The most common technique is wax processing. The samples are immersed in multiple baths of progressively more concentrated ethanol to dehydrate the tissue, followed by a clearing agent, such as xylene or Histoclear, and finally hot molten paraffin wax (impregnation). During this 12- to 16-hour process, paraffin wax replaces the xylene.Embedding
Soft, moist tissues are turned into a hard paraffin block, which is then placed in a mold containing more molten wax (embedded) and allowed to cool and harden.Embedding can also be accomplished using frozen,
non-fixed tissue in a freezing medium. This freezing medium is
liquid at room temperature but when cooled will solidify. Non-fixed
tissue allows for procedures such as in situ hybridizations for
specific mRNAs that
would have been destroyed during the fixing process. It also allows
for very short turnaround where that is needed, as with a patient
currently undergoing surgery.
Sectioning
The tissue is then sectioned into very thin (2–8 micrometer) sections using a microtome. These slices, usually thinner than the average cell, are then placed on a glass slide for staining.Frozen tissue embedded in a freezing medium is
cut on a microtome in a cooled machine called a cryostat.
Staining
Routine staining: This is done to give contrast to the tissue being examined, as without staining it is very difficult to see differences in cell morphology. Hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) are the most commonly used stains in histology and histopathology. Hematoxylin colors nuclei blue; eosin colors the cytoplasm pink. To see the tissue under a microscope, the sections are stained with one or more pigments.Special staining: There are hundreds of various
other techniques that have been used to selectively stain cells and
cellular components. Other compounds used to color tissue sections
include safranin, oil
red o, Congo red, fast green FCF, silver salts, and numerous
natural and artificial dyes
that were usually originated from the development dyes for the
textile industry.
Histochemistry
refers to the science of using chemical reactions between
laboratory chemicals and components within tissue. A commonly
performed histochemical technique is the Perls Prussian
blue reaction, used to demonstrate iron deposits in diseases
like hemochromatosis.
Histology samples have often been examined by
radioactive techniques. In historadiography a
slide (sometimes stained histochemically) is X-rayed. More
commonly, autoradiography is used
to visualize the locations to which a radioactive substance has
been transported within the body, such as cells in S phase
(undergoing DNA
replication) which incorporate tritiated thymidine, or sites to which
radiolabeled nucleic acid
probes bind in in
situ hybridization. For autoradiography on a microscopic level,
the slide is typically dipped into liquid nuclear tract emulsion,
which dries to form the exposure film. Individual silver grains in
the film are visualized with dark
field microscopy.
Recently, antibodies are used to
specifically visualize proteins, carbohydrates, and lipids: this is
called immunohistochemistry,
or when the stain is a fluorescent molecule,
immunofluorescence.
This technique has greatly increased the ability to identify
categories of cells under a microscope. Other advanced techniques,
such as nonradioactive in situ hybridization, can be combined with
immunochemistry to identify specific DNA or RNA molecules with
fluorescent probes or tags that can be used for immunofluorescence
and enzyme-linked
fluorescence amplification (especially alkaline
phosphatase and
tyramide signal amplification). Fluorescence
microscopy and confocal
microscopy are used to detect fluorescent signals with good
intracellular detail. Digital
cameras are increasingly used to capture histological and
histopathological image
Common laboratory stains
Table sourced from Histology:
A Text and Atlas
Alternative techniques
Alternative techniques include cryosection. The tissue is frozen and cut using a cryostat. Tissue staining methods are similar to those of wax sections. Plastic embedding is commonly used in the preparation of material for electron microscopy. Tissues are embedded in epoxy resin. Very thin sections (less than 0.1 micrometer) are cut using diamond or glass knives. The sections are stained with electron dense stains (uranium and lead) so that they can be seen with the electron microscope.History
In the 19th century, histology was an academic discipline in its own right. The 1906 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was awarded to histologists Camillo Golgi and Santiago Ramon y Cajal. They had dueling interpretations of the neural structure of the brain based in differing interpretations of the same images.Histological classification of animal tissues
There are four basic types of tissues: muscle tissue, nervous tissue, connective tissue, and epithelial tissue. All tissue types are subtypes of these four basic tissue types (for example, blood cells are classified as connective tissue, since they generally originate inside bone marrow).- Epithelium: the lining of glands, bowel, skin and some organs like the liver, lung, kidney
- Endothelium: the lining of blood and lymphatic vessels
- Mesothelium: the lining of pleural and pericardial spaces
- Mesenchyme: the cells filling the spaces between the organs, including fat, muscle, bone, cartilage, and tendon cells
- Blood cells: the red and white blood cells, including those found in lymph nodes and spleen
- Neurons: any of the conducting cells of the nervous system
- Germ cells: reproductive cells (spermatozoa in men, oocytes in women)
- Placenta: an organ characteristic of true mammals during pregnancy, joining mother and offspring, providing endocrine secretion and selective exchange of soluble, but not particulate, blood-borne substances through an apposition of uterine and trophoblastic vascularised parts
- Stem cells: cells able to turn into one or several of the above types
Note that tissues from plants, fungi, and
microorganisms can also be examined histologically. Their structure
is very different from animal tissues.
Related sciences
- Cell biology is the study of living cells, their DNA and RNA and the proteins they express.
- Anatomy is the study of organs visible by the naked eye.
- Morphology studies entire organisms.
Artifacts
Artifacts are structures or features in tissue
that interfere with normal histological examination. These are not
always present in normal tissue and can come from outside sources.
Artifacts interfere with histology by changing the tissues
appearance and hiding structures. These can be divided into two
categories:
Pre-histology
These are features and structures that have being introduced prior to the collection of the tissues. A common example of these include: ink from tattoos and freckles (melanin) in skin samples.Post-histology
Artifacts can result from tissue processing. Processing commonly lead to changes like shrinkage, color changes in different tissues types and alterations of the structures in the tissue. Because these are caused in a laboratory the majority of post histology artifacts can be avoided or removed after being discovered. A common example is mercury pigment left behind after using Bouin's fixative to fix a section.References
1. Merck Source (2002). Dorland's Medical Dictionary. Retrieved 2005-01-26.2. Stedman's Medical Dictionaries (2005).
Stedman's Online Medical
Dictionary. Retrieved 2005-01-26.
3. 4,000 online histology images (2007).
(http://histology-online.com)
See also
External links
histological in Afrikaans: Histologie
histological in Arabic: علم الأنسجة
histological in Aragonese: Istolochía
histological in Asturian: Histoloxía
histological in Bosnian: Histologija
histological in Bulgarian: Хистология
histological in Catalan: Histologia
histological in Czech: Histologie
histological in Danish: Histologi
histological in German: Histologie
histological in Estonian: Histoloogia
histological in Modern Greek (1453-):
Ιστολογία
histological in Spanish: Histología
histological in Esperanto: Histologio
histological in Persian: بافتشناسی
histological in French: Histologie
histological in Galician: Histoloxía
histological in Croatian: Histologija
histological in Indonesian: Histologi
histological in Italian: Istologia
histological in Hebrew: היסטולוגיה
histological in Georgian: ჰისტოლოგია
histological in Luxembourgish: Histologie
histological in Lithuanian: Histologija
histological in Macedonian: Хистологија
histological in Malay (macrolanguage):
Histologi
histological in Dutch: Histologie
histological in Japanese: 組織学
histological in Norwegian: Histologi
histological in Norwegian Nynorsk:
Histologi
histological in Occitan (post 1500):
Istologia
histological in Polish: Histologia
histological in Portuguese: Histologia
histological in Romanian: Histologie
histological in Russian: Гистология
histological in Simple English: Histology
histological in Slovak: Histológia
histological in Slovenian: Histologija
histological in Serbian: Хистологија
histological in Serbo-Croatian:
Histologija
histological in Finnish: Kudosoppi
histological in Swedish: Histologi
histological in Thai: มิญชวิทยา
histological in Vietnamese: Mô học
histological in Turkish: Doku bilimi
histological in Ukrainian: Гістологія
histological in Chinese: 组织学