Proper Slide Drying for Paraffin-Sectioned Slides

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Proper Slide Drying for Paraffin-Sectioned Slides

Freshly sectioned tissue slides should be dried standing up to let water run down/drain from underneath sections. Tissue sections cut for special stains or immunohistochemistry (IHC) should be dried at room temperature before staining applications. Unstained slides that require transportation or storage should not be deparaffinized or heated in a slide dryer since the paraffin acts as a protective barrier for the tissue.
Slides should be placed in a slide dryer or oven for 15-20 minutes to dry out water before deparaffinization. Slides can also be dried overnight at room temperature to allow the tissue to adhere better to the slides.
The temperature of drying ovens should be at, or just above, the melting point of paraffin. This is typically around 62° C for proper adherence and deparaffinization of tissue sections.
High drying temperatures will boil water under the tissue section and lead to nuclear bubbling.
High temperatures will also melt fatty tissue components in tissue sections.
If tissue sections are not dried properly before staining, they have a greater chance of lifting from the slides and even falling off during the staining process. Tissue lifting often occurs with brain sections, nail clippings, bone sections, and poorly processed tissue samples.