The principal use of the frozen section procedure is the examination of tissue while surgery is taking place. This may be for various reasons. In the performance of
Mohs surgery, it is a simple method for real-time margin control of a surgical specimen. If a tumor appears to have
metastasized, a sample of the suspected metastasis is sent for cryosection to confirm its identity. This will help the surgeon decide whether there is any point in continuing the operation. Usually, aggressive surgery is performed only if there is a chance to cure the patient. If the tumor has metastasized, surgery is usually not curative, and the surgeon will choose a more conservative surgery, or no resection at all. If a tumor has been resected but it is unclear whether the resection margin is free of tumor, an intraoperative consultation is requested to assess the need to make a further resection for clear margins. In a
sentinel node procedure, a sentinel node containing tumor tissue prompts a further lymph node dissection, while a benign node will avoid such a procedure. If surgery is explorative, rapid examination of a lesion might help identify the possible cause of a patient's symptoms. It is important to note, however, that the pathologist is very limited by the poor technical quality of the frozen sections. A final diagnosis is rarely offered intraoperatively. Rarely, cryosections are used to detect the presence of substances lost in the traditional histology technique, for example lipids. They can also be used to detect some
antigens masked by formalin. The cryostat is available in a small portable device weighing less than , to a large stationary device or more. The entire histologic laboratory can be carried in one portable box, making frozen section histology a possible tool in primitive medicine. ==Accuracy of diagnosis==