1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to the field of scanning tissue specimens on microscope slides, with particular emphasis on instrumentation and methods of changing slide trays manually, or automatically using a robotic manipulator. More particularly, this invention relates to a slide tray, receptor and docking station in which the slide tray can be manually or automatically inserted into or removed from the receptor, which is mounted on a moving stage of a microscope slide scanner.
2. Background of the Invention
Two general types of microscope slide loaders are known. Some slide loaders are designed for loading slides onto standard microscopes (for example the Prior Scientific PL-100) and some slide loaders integrated into pathology scanners (for example Aperio ScanScope AT) place microscope slides onto the microscope stage or insert them into the optical path. These slide loaders have the advantage of being small in size and able to handle large numbers of standard microscope slides. Disadvantages include problems that may occur when a slide breaks and the loader continues to load slides, and difficulty in handling large slides or mixing slide sizes. A second type of slide loader handles slide trays containing one or more slides, with the advantage that the slides themselves are not handled during movement of the trays, and multiple slides can be loaded into a single tray. The size of slides that can be handled is limited only by the size of the tray (our autoloader handles slide trays containing slides up to 6×8 inches in size), and slide sizes can be mixed in a single run or even in a single tray.
It is an object of this invention to provide a slide tray, receptor and docking station such that a slide tray can be manually or automatically inserted into or removed from a receptor mounted on the moving stage of a slide-scanning microscope without transmitting force to the moving stage during insertion or removal of the slide tray.
It is an object of this invention to provide a slide tray, receptor and docking station such that a slide tray can be manually or automatically inserted into the receptor (which is mounted on the moving stage of a scanning microscope) for acquisition of a preview image. The slide tray can then be removed from the receptor, and then re-inserted into the receptor at a later time for a final scan of the specimen on the microscope slide, in which the placement of the slide on the microscope stage is substantially the same after each insertion.
It is a further object of this invention to provide a slide tray and receptor such that a slide tray can be manually or automatically re-inserted into the receptor (which is mounted on the moving stage of a slide-scanning microscope) for acquisition of a second image of the specimen, where the placement of the slide tray in the receptor (and thus the position of the slide on the microscope stage) is substantially the same after each insertion.
It is a further object of this invention to provide a slide tray containing a permanently-mounted test and/or calibration specimen that can be used for transmission and/or reflection imaging.
A slide tray and receptor in combination is used with one or more microscope slides located in a microscope slide scanner, the slide tray comprising an opening to removably receive the microscope slide. The receptor comprises a receiving portion that is sized and shaped to receive the tray, the receptor having at least one retainer to removably retain the tray in position when the tray is inserted into the receptor. The receptor is affixed to a movable stage of the slide scanner, the slide tray being located in substantially the same position in the receptor each time that the tray is inserted into the receptor.
A slide tray, receptor and docking station in combination is used with one or more microscope slides located in a microscope slide scanner, the slide tray comprising an opening to removably receive a microscope slide. The receptor comprises a receiving portion that is sized and shaped to receive the tray, the receptor having at least one retainer to removably retain the tray in position for scanning the microscope slide when the tray is inserted into the receptor. The receptor is affixed to a movable stage of the slide scanner, the slide tray being mounted in substantially the same position in the receptor each time that it is inserted into the receptor. The receptor has at least one locking area, the locking area being sized and located to removably receive a lock located on the docking station to lock the receptor relative to the docking station when the tray is inserted into or removed from the receptor. The slide scanner has a controller to control operation of the tray, receptor and docking station so that the movable stage is not subject to external forces as a tray is inserted or removed from the receptor.
A slide tray for insertion into a receptor is used with one or more microscope slides located in a microscope slide scanner, the slide tray comprising a permanently-mounted test and/or calibration specimen that can be used for transmission and/or reflection imaging.
A method of inserting or removing slide trays from a receptor is provided, the slide trays having one or more microscope slides and being located in a microscope slide scanner. The method comprises locating a receptor on a movable stage of the slide scanner, operating a docking station to releasably lock the receptor relative to the docking station whenever a tray is inserted into or removed from the receptor without transmitting force to the moving stage during the insertion or removal of the slide tray.
a shows a preferred embodiment of a slide tray used in the present invention, showing the pins which interact with the spring locking mechanism to hold the slide tray in place in the slide tray receptor shown in
b shows a slide tray with microscope slide mounted, as well as a test and calibration slide mounted near the positioning pins on the right side of the diagram.
b shows the outer frame of a slide tray like that shown in
a is a perspective view of the slide tray receptor showing the spring locking mechanism used to keep the slide tray in place in the receptor.
b is a perspective view of the slide tray receptor of
The present invention is a practical docking station, slide tray receptor and slide tray that enables a slide tray containing one or more microscope slides to be manually or automatically inserted into and removed from a slide tray receptor mounted on a computer-controlled microscope stage without transmitting force to the microscope stage during insertion or removal, and to be re-inserted into the receptor at substantially the same position relative to the microscope stage.
An example of a slide tray as used in the present invention is shown in
b shows a slide tray containing a permanently-mounted test and/or calibration slide 145 which is mounted above an open window (not shown) in the slide holder frame so either transmission or reflection test and/or calibration slides can be used. Slide trays containing test or calibration slides can be used for several different purposes, including calibrating the instrument (often done daily or before scanning a large number of similar slides); for standardizing fluorescence by measuring fluorescence from a well-characterized calibration slide; for testing instrument resolution; and many others. The barcode 150 on the back edge of the slide tray includes information describing the calibration and/or test slide mounted on that tray.
A slide tray frame 100 for very large slides is shown in
a shows a slide tray receptor 200 for receiving and holding a microscope slide tray like that shown in
b shows an exploded view of the spring-loaded rocker arm on the left side of receptor 200. Rocker arm 220 pivots about axle 222, pushed by spring 221. At the other end of the rocker arm, roller 224 is mounted on axle 226 with spacer 228 holding the roller away from the end of the rocker arm. Bushing 210, which is inserted in the top of guide 230, is also shown.
When a slide tray is to be inserted or removed, a series of stage movements are made under computer control. First, the Z stages 400 level the tray receptor 200 and then move it vertically until the front edge of the receptor is just above pads 340 (which cannot be seen in this view). Next, the X and Y stages center the tray receptor so that bushings 210 at the front of receptor 200 are aligned with pins 330 in docking station 300. Solenoid 310 is energized, pulling pins 330 down into bushings 210 and pushing the bottom of receptor 200 against pads 340. At the same time, power is removed from the Z stages so that the receptor is now held firmly by the docking station, and no force is transmitted to the stages. If power is not removed from the Z stage, there is the possibility that the solenoid and Z stages will compete, which may cause the control program to shut down the stages. Depending on the motors used in the X and Y stages and the controller used, it may be necessary to remove power from these stage motors when docked, but in practice it has been found that this not necessary for the particular stages used. Optical sensor 410 confirms whether a slide tray is in the receptor. If a slide tray is in the receptor, it can now be removed either manually or using a robotic tray handler. If the optical sensor 410 does not find a tray in the receptor, one can now be loaded manually or by a robotic tray handler. After a new slide tray has been loaded, solenoid 310 is powered off, pins 340 retract, at the same time the Z stage is activated, and then the X, Y and two Z stages move the new specimen into position to start preview scanning, tissue finding, focusing, setting system gain, etc., and scanning. Because the combination of slide tray, slide tray receptor and docking station described in this patent have been designed so that a tray can be removed from the instrument and then loaded again with the specimen in substantially the same position relative to the microscope stage, when a number of slides are to be scanned in the same run using a robotic tray loader, the operator can perform a rapid preview of specimens on all of the slides, check to make sure focus and exposure are correct, and that instrument settings are correct for each slide, before starting batch scanning of a number of slide trays. This is particularly useful when a batch scan can take several hours, and can most conveniently be done overnight. The bushings 210 are each a locking area on the receptor. The pistons are locks to lock the receptor relative to the locking mechanism.
Having described preferred embodiments of a new apparatus and method for changing slide trays in a Microscope Slide Scanner for imaging microscopic and macroscopic specimens, constructed in accordance with the present invention, it is believed that other modifications, variations, and changes will be suggested to those skilled in the art in view of the teachings set forth herein. It is therefore to be understood that all such variations, modifications, and changes are believed to fall within the scope of the present invention as defined by the appended claims.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/CA2013/000487 | 5/17/2013 | WO | 00 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61649073 | May 2012 | US |