Your Guide to What Happens Next
"We're sending it to pathology."
Those five words can feel enormous. You might not know what a pathologist does, where your sample goes, or when you'll hear something. That's completely normal — and that's exactly what this guide is for.
Scroll through the five steps below to see exactly what happens, written in plain language. No medical degree required.
Written for patients
8th grade reading level
Five Steps from Sample to Answer
Every pathology case follows the same path. Here's what happens at each stage — in plain language, with honest timelines.
Your Doctor Ordered a Test
The moment that brought you here
When your doctor says "we need to take a sample," they're asking a pathologist to help answer a question your regular tests can't. This might be a biopsy — a tiny piece of tissue — or a fluid sample, or cells collected with a swab. Your doctor doesn't send it to pathology because something is definitely wrong. They send it because they want to be certain.
Your Sample Is Collected
What happens at the procedure
A nurse, technician, or your doctor collects your sample during a biopsy, scope, or simple swab. The sample goes into a small container with a preserving liquid — usually formalin — that keeps the tissue in exactly the condition it was in when it left your body. A label with your name and information is attached right away. The container is sealed and sent to the pathology lab, usually the same day.
The Lab Prepares Your Sample
Turning tissue into something a microscope can read
Your sample arrives at the lab, where a pathology technician processes it. The tissue is embedded in wax, sliced thinner than a human hair — about 4 microns — and placed on a glass slide. Then it's stained with dyes, usually purple and pink, so the cells show up clearly under a microscope. This process takes 24 to 48 hours for most samples. Some complex cases take longer.
A Pathologist Examines Your Slide
The expert analysis
A pathologist — a medical doctor who specializes in diagnosing disease through tissue — sits at a microscope and examines your slide. They look at the shape of your cells, how they're arranged, and whether anything looks different from healthy tissue. For some samples, they run additional tests. The pathologist writes a detailed report describing exactly what they see. This report is the answer your doctor has been waiting for.
Your Results Are Delivered
What comes next
Your pathologist sends the written report to your doctor. Your doctor reviews it and contacts you — usually by phone or at a follow-up appointment. The report uses medical terms, but your doctor will explain what it means for you specifically. If the results are complex, you may be referred to a specialist. No matter what the report says, you are allowed to ask questions, request a second opinion, and take time to understand.
Most results take 3 to 10 days.
Pathology takes time because accuracy matters more than speed. Rushing the process can lead to errors. The wait is frustrating, but it exists because your pathologist is being careful.
Complex cases — those needing special stains, genetic tests, or second opinions — can take 2 to 3 weeks. If your wait is longer than expected, call your doctor's office and ask for a status update.
A note on urgency:
If your doctor is concerned about something time-sensitive, they can request a "rush" or "stat" pathology read, which can return results in hours. Trust that your doctor is managing the timeline with your health in mind.
Your biopsy or swab is taken and placed in preserving solution.
The tissue is embedded, sliced, stained, and placed on glass slides.
A specialist doctor reviews your slides under a microscope.
The written report travels from pathology to your physician.
Results are discussed at an appointment or by phone.
There's a doctor at the microscope who cares about your answer.
A pathologist is a medical doctor who completed four years of medical school plus four to five years of specialized training in diagnosing disease through tissue. They are board-certified, which means they passed rigorous national exams. They are the expert your doctor turns to when they need a definitive answer.
You may never meet them. That's not because they're not involved in your care — it's because their work happens in the lab, at the microscope, with your slides. Their written report is one of the most important documents in your medical record.
You have the right to your own report.
Your pathology report is part of your medical record. You can request a copy at any time. You can also request that your slides be sent to another institution for a second opinion — this is common and completely acceptable to ask for.
Prepare Questions for Your Doctor
Appointments move fast. Having your questions written down means you won't forget what matters most. Answer three questions below and we'll generate a personalized list you can bring with you.
No account needed. Your answers stay on your device.
1. What kind of biopsy was it?
2. Are your results pending or received?
3. What's your main priority right now?
Select your biopsy type, result status, and primary concern to generate a personalized question list.
Specimen
Patient Guide — Printable Edition
Your Complete Pathology Journey
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