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For small biopsies, our histologists usually put 4 levels per slide with a ribbon of two consecutive sections per level. The sections on a ribbon are only microns apart and I have never seen something on one side that wasn't on the other, barring some tissue being rubbed off. I always have treated the extra section as a kind of back up in case the other side was folded or partly rubbed off. If I think the section I'm looking at is adequate for evaluation, I do not typically look at the virtually identical fragment on the other side.
Part of my challenge is that if I look at a second (or sometimes even a third) section that is not appreciably different from the first, my brain considers it busy work and I have a hard time giving it the attention it deserves.
What are you or your staff pathologists doing with these virtually identical sections? Has anyone ever seen a case where the diagnosis would have been missed if only one side was examined?
Part of my challenge is that if I look at a second (or sometimes even a third) section that is not appreciably different from the first, my brain considers it busy work and I have a hard time giving it the attention it deserves.
What are you or your staff pathologists doing with these virtually identical sections? Has anyone ever seen a case where the diagnosis would have been missed if only one side was examined?