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1.
Brains of rat with surgical lesions 3-5 days old are fixed in 10% neutralized formalin (excess of CaCO3), 20 μ serial frozen sections cut therefrom and kept in neutralized formalin for an additional 24-48 hr. The sections are soaked in distilled water 12-24 hr, transferred to 50% alcohol containing 0.75 ml of concentrated NH4OH (sp. gr. 0.91) per 100 ml 12-24 hr, placed in distilled water 2-3 hr and then in silver-pyridine solution (AgNO3 3% aq., 20 ml; pyridine, 1 ml) for 48 hr. Test sections are transferred directly to each one of 3 ammoniated silver-solutions, pH 12.8, 13.0 and 13.2, made as follows: To 200 ml of solution 1 (silver nitrate, 6.4 gm; alcohol 96%, 220 ml; NH4OH (sp. gr. 0.91), 28 ml and distilled water, 440 ml) is added respectively 8-12 ml, 12-16 ml and 16-20 ml of solution 2 (2% NaOH) to give the pH desired. The test sections are studied and the optimal ammoniated silver solution chosen. Two baths of ammoniated silver are used, the section placed with continuous agitation into the first bath for 30 sec and the second bath for 60 sec. The sections are then transferred directly into a reducing bath (formalin 10%, 2ml; alcohol 96%, 5 ml; citric acid 1%, 1.5 ml and distilled water, 4.5 ml) for 2 min and from there to 5% Na2S2O3 for 1 min, rinsed in 3 changes of distilled water, dehydrated and mounted.  相似文献   

2.
A method for impregnating oligodendroglia in nervous tissue (monkey) fixed and preserved in formalin for many years is described. This tissue is reconditioned by placing 12 to 30μ frozen sections of it in concentrated ammonia (sp. gr. 0.90) and by washing them slowly for 24 hours with a 1 mm. stream of water. The fluid is then poured off the sections; the jar is refilled with concentrated ammonia; and washing is repeated for another 24 hours. The sections are then plunged into concentrated ammonia for 7 minutes.

After treatment in ammonia, the sections are incubated for one hour at 38oC. in Globus' 5% hydrobromic acid solution. They are washed again, in distilled water, and then impregnated in a “medium” strength ammoniacal silver carbonate solution (5 ml. of 10% AgNO3 added to 15 ml. of 5% Na2CO3. The precipitate is dissolved in concentrated ammonia and diluted to SO ml. with distilled water). Impregnation is followed by reduction in 1% formalin without agitation; fixation in 5% Na2S2O3; dehydration, and mounting in clarite.

Typical oligodendroglia (Fig. 1) were made visible by use of the method outlined in this paper.  相似文献   

3.
Autopsy and biopsy specimens of human skin were fixed overnight in alcoholic Bouin's solution, embedded in paraffin, cut at 7 μ, deparaffinized, hydrated to 70% alcohol, and treated as follows—stained 2 hours in a mixture consisting of: 0.2% orcein in 70% alcohol and 1% HC1 (conc.), 125 ml; 5% hematoxylin in absolute alcohol, 40 ml; 6% FeCl3 in water, 25 ml; and aqueous I2-KI (1:2:100), 25 ml—rinsed in distilled water until the excess stain was removed—differentiated in 1.2% FeCl3, 5-15 sec—washed in running water, 5 min—differentiation completed in 0.01% HC1 acid-alcohol, 1 min—a dip in 95% alcohol—distilled water, 2 min—0.25% aqueous metanil yellow, 5-10 sec—a 95% alcohol dip—dehydrated in absolute alcohol, xylene, and mounted in a resinous medium. The technic combines the orcein of Pinkus' stain and the hematoxylin mixture of Verhoeff into a single staining solution and gives sharp and reliable results for both coarse and extremely delicate elastic fibers. These stain purple; nuclei, violet; and background, yellow. The stain allows the use of formalin, Bouin's fluid and Zenker-formol fixation. The results have been consistent in other primates as well as in man.  相似文献   

4.
The stain is applied routinely to tissues fixed in 10% buffered formalin (pH near 7.0) or in Bouin's fluid. Bring paraffin section to water as usual and mordant 72 hr in 5% CrCl3 dissolved in 5% acetic acid. Wash in water and in 70% alcohol and stain 6 hr. Formula of staining solution: new fuchsin, 1% in 70% alcohol, 100 ml; HCl, conc., 2 ml and paraldehyde, 2 ml, mixed together and added to the dye solution; let stand 24 hr before use. After staining, wash in running tap water 5-10 min, rinse in distilled water and counterstain if desired. Dehydration in alcohol, clearing and covering completes the process. When the paraldehyde is obtained from a freshly opened bottle, standardized staining times can be used and thus eliminate the necessity of differentiating individual slides. The granules of beta cells stained deep blue to purple and were demonstrated in the pancreatic islet of man, dog, mouse, frog, guinea pig and rabbit.  相似文献   

5.
Tissues from representative mammals, amphibia and invertebrates were fixed for 5-24 hr in either an aqueous solution of 8% p-toluene sulfonic acid (PTSA) or in 10% formalin to which 5 gm PTSA/100 ml had been added, and processed through embedding in polyethylene glycol 400 distearate in the usual manner. Sections cut at 4-6 μ were floated on 0.2% gelatin containing 1.25% formalin, and spread and dried on slides at a temperature not exceeding 25 C. Wax was removed with xylene, and the sections brought to water through ethanol as usual. The working staining solution was made from three stock solutions: A. Chlorantine fast blue 2RLL, 0.5%; B. Cibacron turquoise blue G-E, 0.5%; C. Procion red M-P, 0.5%—each of which was dissolved in 98.5 ml of distilled water to which 0.5 ml of glacial acetic acid and 0.5 ml of propylene glycol monophenyl ether (a fungicide) had been added. For use, the three solutions were mixed in the proportions: A, 3; B, 4; and C, 3 volumes. Staining time was uncritical, 10-30 min usually sufficing for 6 μ, sections. The chief feature of the staining is the differentiation of oxygenated and nonoxygenated red blood corpuscles, in reds and blues respectively. Connective tissue stained blue or blue-green and mucin, green. Nuclei and cytoplasm stain according to their condition at the time of fixation. The mixed stain keeps well, remaining active after 2 yr of storage.  相似文献   

6.
A new indirect method is described for following volume changes of homogeneous pieces of tissue during fixation, dehydration and embedding, and area changes during sectioning, staining and mounting. Pieces of rabbit kidney cortex were compared after fixation in Destin's, Orth's, Petrunkevitch's cupric-paranitrophenol, Bouin's, SUSA, Zenker-formol, 10% formalin in distilled water, formalin in saline, Burke's pyridine formalin, CaCOy neutralized formalin, MgCO3-neutralized formalin, Bensley's vacuum distilled neutral formalin in distilled water, and Bensley's neutral formalin in saline; during dehydration in ethyl alcohol, dioxan, and tertiary butyl alcohol and clearing in xylol and chloroform; and after infiltration and embedding with parowax, with paraffin-nitrocellulose double embedding technic, with hot nitrocellulose, and with cold nitrocellulose. The H-ion concentration of these fixatives was followed during tissue fixation.

Altho all fixatives showed specific merences, SUSA and Bouin's gave the best general results and neutral formalin mixtures, especially pyridine-formalin, the poorest. Isotonic saline was found superior to distilled water as a formalin diluent, reducing tissue swelling during formalin fixation. Reagents producing marked decreases in tissue volume render such tissues less susceptible to shrinkage during subsequent procedures. Shrinkage of tissue during dehydration and infiltration with hot parffin may exceed that produced by fixation alone. Excessive heat causes tissue distortion and shrinkage. Inijltration with hot paran causes considerable shrinkage, with hot nitrocellulose Iess, and with cold nitrocellulose the least sbrinkage.  相似文献   

7.
The chelate k prepared by adding 4.5 gm of aluminon and 100 gm of chrome alum to 200 ml of distilled water, boiling gently for 20 min., filtering, and allowing the filtrate to drop into 3.5 liters of absolute alcohol. The alcoholic suspension is filtered and its precipitate is dried at room temperature. To prepare the staining solution 3 gm of chelate are dissolved in 100 ml of 3% HCI. Hydrated sections—paraffin, frozen, or celloidin—are stained for 30 min to 18 hr at room temperature. The stain is self-limiting and requires no differentiation. Since the stain is not removed by alcohol or weak acids, a large variety of counterstains my be used.  相似文献   

8.
Fresh tissue slices were fixed in 5% formalin containing 0.9% NaCl for 10-20 min and frozen sections therefrom floated for 3 hr at 37°C on an incubating mixture made as follows. Sodium pyrophosphate (Na4P2O7-12H2O), 1.088 gm was dissolved in 20-30 ml of distilled water and to this was added ferric chloride (FeCl3-6H2O), 0.61 gm dissolved in 10-15 ml of water. The precipitate was just dissolved by cautiously adding 5-10% aqueous Na2CO3 solution and the pH adjusted to 7.2 with 1N HCl. The volume was made up to 100 ml and 0.9 gm of NaCl added. Before use, 1 ml of 10% Mg(NO3) was added. After incubation, sections were washed 10-15 min in 0.9% NaCl, then mounted on glass slides and air-dried. When dry, the slides were immersed in 0.9% NaCl containing 0.2-0.5% ammonium sulfide for 2-3 min, then dehydrated rapidly through graded alcohols, cleared, and covered in balsam. Sites of pyrophosphatase activity stained in various shades of green. Acid pyrophosphatase also was histochemically demonstrated by the same principle, excepting that the substrate solution was adjusted to pH 3.7-4.0 with acetate buffer. The pattern of distribution of pyrophosphatase and glycerophosphatase was almost identical.  相似文献   

9.
Tissues were fixed at 20° C for 1 hr in 1% OsO4, buffered at pH 7.4 with veronal-acetate (Palade's fixative), soaked 5 min in the same buffer without OsO4, then dehydrated in buffer-acetone mixtures of 30, 50, 75 and 90% acetone content, and finally in anhydrous acetone. Infiltration was accomplished through Vestopal-W-acetone mixtures of 1:3, 1:1, 3:1 to undiluted Vestopal. After polymerisation at 60° C for 24 hr, 1-2 μ sections were cut, dried on slides without adhesive, and stained by any of the following methods. (1) Mayer's acid hemalum: Flood the slides with the staining solution and allow to stand at 20°C for 2-3 hr while the water of the solution evaporates; wash in distilled water, 2 min; differentiate in 1% HCl; rinse 1-2 sec in 10% NH,OH. (2) Iron-trioxyhematein (of Hansen): Apply the staining solution as in method 1; wash 3-5 min in 5% acetic acid; restain for 1-12 hr by flooding with a mixture consisting of staining solution, 2 parts, and 1 part of a 1:1 mixture of 2% acetic acid and 2% H2SO4 (observe under microscope for staining intensity); wash 2 min in distilled water and 1 hr in tap water. (3) Iron-hematoxylin (Heidenhain): Mordant 6 hr in 2.5% iron-alum solution; wash 1 min in distilled water; stain in 1% or 0.5% ripened hematoxylin for 3-12 br; differentiate 8 min in 2.5%, and 15 min in 1% iron-alum solution; wash 1 hr in tap water. (4) Aceto-carmine (Schneider): Stain 12-24 hr; wash 0.5-1.0 min in distilled water. (5) Picrofuchsin: Stain 24-48 hr in 1% acid fuchsin dissolved in saturated aqueous picric acid; differentiate for only 1-2 sec in 96% ethanol. (6) Modified Giemsa: Mix 640 ml of a solution of 9.08 gm KH2PO4 in 1000 ml of distilled water and 360 ml of a solution of 11.88 gm Na2HPO4-2H2O in 1000 ml of distilled water. Soak sections in this buffer, 12 hr. Dissolve 1.0 gm of azur I in 125 ml of boiling distilled water; add 0.5 gm of methylene blue; filter and add hot distilled water until a volume of 250 ml is reached (solution “AM”). Dissolve 1.5 gm of eosin, yellowish, in 250 ml of hot distilled water; filter (solution “E”). Mix 1.5 ml of “AM” in 100 ml of buffer with 3 ml of “E” in 100 ml of buffer. Stain 12-24 hr. Differentiate 3 sec in 25 ml methyl benzoate in 75 ml dioxane; 3 sec in 35 ml methyl benzoate in 65 ml acetone; 3 sec in 30 ml acetone in 70 ml methyl benzoate; and 3 sec in 5 ml acetone in 95 ml methyl benzoate. Dehydrated sections may be covered in a neutral synthetic resin (Caedax was used).  相似文献   

10.
The following procedure stains the atrioventricular conduction system selectively. (1) Wash the fresh heart with physiological saline solution to free it of blood; (2) fix it in 10% formalin containing 0.5% HIO4 for 1 hr; (3) wash in 3 changes of distilled water for 20 min; (4) keep in 80% alcohol for 12 hr to 2 wk; (5) wash with distilled water; (6) treat with a dilute Schiff's reagent containing 0.1 gm of basic fuchsin per 100 ml for 0.5-2 min; (7) rinse in three changes of 2% Na2SO3 in 0.2 N HCI for 3-5 min; (8) wash and examine in 80% alcohol; store in 80% alcohol.  相似文献   

11.
Safranin is diazotized by using the customary molar ratio—dye, 1:HCl, 3:NaNO2l. Partly oxidized NaNO2 can be used, if necessary, by increasing the concentration of its solution enough to cause the normal color change from red to deep blue to occur within 2 min after adding the NaNO2. To avoid carrying over excess HNO2 into the alkaline coupling solution, 1 ml of 3% alcoholic urea solution (30 mg) is added for each milliliter excess of 1 N NaNO2 used. Any free HNO2 remaining at the end of the diazotization period produces a deep blue violet on starch-KI paper. Prolonged acid washing may be applied after coupling to decolorize cationic dye staining or triazenes. Na2S2O4, TiCl3 or SnCl2 may be used to bleach true azo colorations. This decolorization is not limited to newly formed azo compounds with tissue.  相似文献   

12.
Human serum at full strength and in dilutions with physiological saline (0.85%) ranging from 1:1 to 1:72 was allowed to permeate rectangular masses of fibrin foam in small pieces (maximum diameters 0.2 × 0.4 × 1.0 cm), and then placed in 10% neutral formalin, Zenker's solution and Bouin's solution. After fixation for 4-12 hr, the fibrin foam and occluded serum proteins were imbedded, sections cut and stained with eosin bluish (CI. 771), 0.25% alcoholic solution, and by the McManus periodic acid-Schiff technique, using basic fuchsin (CI. 677). Undiluted serum (6.4 gin 100 ml) was not stainable after fixation in 10% formalin. With Zenker's solution stainable serum proteins are recognizable at 0.22 gm/100 ml and with Bouin's solution at 0.08 gm/100 ml. Dried aliquots (0.2 ml) of the same dilutions, spread over an area of 1.0 cm2, fixed and stained similarly, gave almost identical results.  相似文献   

13.
Staining of myelinated fibers including the delicate myelin sheaths of infantile animals is as follows: perfuse the anesthetized animal with a pH 7.4 posphate-buffered fixative, either 10% formalin, 6% gluteraldehyde or a mixture containing 3% gluteraldehyde and 2% acrolein. Dissect out the brain or spinal cord and continue fixation for at least 24 hr. Cut larger brains to 1 cm in at least one dimension. Wash in running tap water 2-3 hr and soak in 2.5% potassium dichromate in 1% acetic acid (the primary mordant) for 3-5 days in darkness. Wash at least 12 hr in running tap water. Dehydrate and embed in celloidin and store in 80% ethanol. Section at 25-60 μ into 80% ethanol. Wash 1-2 min in distilled water and then immerse in 1-2% ferric alum at 50 C for at least 1 hr (the secondary mordant). Wash in tap water and stain at least 1 hr at 50-60 C in 0.5% unripened hematoxylin in 1% acetic acid. Wash well in tap water and differentiate in a mixture containing 0.5% ferrityanide, 0.5% borax and 0.5% Na2CO3; 2 changes. Wash well in distilled water, then in tap water, and dehydrate, clear and mount. Myelin stains black, cell bodies stain tan, and the background is pale yellow. With minor modifications in timing, the method is applicable to frozen and to paraffin sections; the primary mordant being omitted in the freezing technique.  相似文献   

14.
Experiments were made to test the influence of the pH of the fixing fluid (ranging from 1.0-8.1) and that of the chromating fluid (1.65-7.8) on subsequent silver impregnation. Brains of adult monkeys, cats, dogs, rabbits, guinea pigs, rats and mice were fixed by the pulsating-perfusion method of Haushalter and Bertram (1955), after first washing out the blood with saline-acacia solution of the same pH as that of the 10% formol-saline-acacia used for fixation. The brains were sliced to 3 mm thickness and the slices further fixed 1-2 days in 10% formalin with its pH adjusted to that of the preceding fixing fluid. Chromation for 1 day followed, with acidified ZnCrO4 at pH 1.65-5.9 and buffered Na2CrO4 at pH 7.8. Silvering for 2 days in 0.75% AgNO3 solution effected the staining. Dehydration, paraffin embedding and sectioning completed the process.

From these experiments, it was found that fixation at pH 7.0-7.2 followed by chromation at pH 3.1 in a mixture of ZnCrO4, 60 gm and formic acid, 35 ml, diluted to 1000 ml with distilled water, was optimum for best impregnation of nerve cells and their processes. Human brain and that of newborn mammals, although not perfused, responded well to the controlled-pH procedure. The advantages of the technic are the staining of nerve cells in regions refractory to previous methods and the relatively short time needed for its completion.  相似文献   

15.
Hortega's ammoniated silver carbonate method was used to demonstrate lysosomes in the central nervous system and kidney of adult rats. Formol-CaCl2, (10%:1%) fixed, frozen sections were impregnated for 10 min in Hortega's solution: 30 ml of 10% AgNO2 and 90 ml of 5% Na2CO3, with concentrated NH4OH added until the precipitate dissolved, then distilled water to make 400 ml. This procedure revealed silver-positive cytoplasmic structures whose form, shape and distribution were similar to that seen by staining adjacent sections for acid phosphatase. A short fixation of 18-24 hr appears to be essential. A useful, nonenzymatic method for the demonstration of lysosomes is thereby available.  相似文献   

16.
Tissue fixed in 10% formalin, formol saline, CaCO3 or phosphate buffer neutralized formalin, Baker's formol calcium, Cajal's formol ammonium bromide, formalin-95% ethanol 1:9, formalin-methanol 1:9, Lillie's methanol-chloroform or Salthouse's formol cetyltrimethylammonium bromide was dehydrated and embedded in paraffin. Sections were attached to slides with either albumen or gelatine adhesive and processed throughout at room temperature of 22-25 C. Mordanting 30-60 min in 1% iron alum was followed by a 10 min wash in 4 changes of distilled water. Myelin was stained in a gallocyanin self-differentiating solution for 1-2.5 hr; thick sections requiring the longer time. The staining solution (pH approximately 7.4) consisted of Na2CO3, 90 mg; distilled water, 100 ml; gallocyanin, 250 mg; and ethanol, 5 ml. The ethanol was added to this mixture last, and after the other ingredients had been boiled and then cooled to room temperature. After a staining and thorough washing, Nissl granules were stained for 5-10 min in a solution consisting of: 0.1 M acetic acid, 60 ml; 0.1 M sodium acetate, 40 ml; methyl green, 500 mg. Washing, dehydration, clearing and mounting completed the process. Myelin sheaths were stained dark violet; neuronal nuclei, light green with dark granules of chromatin; nucleoli of motor cells and erythrocytes, dark violet; cytoplasm, green with dark green Nissl granules. The simple and reliable method can be adapted easily for use with automatic tissue processors.  相似文献   

17.
Blocks of fresh issue were fixed 2 or more days in: cobalt sulfate (or nitrate), 1 gm; distilled water, 80 ml; 10% calcium chloride, 10 ml; and formalin, 10 ml. The fixed tissue was washed thoroughly in tap water, embedded in gelatin, frozen sections cut, and mounted on slides with gelatin adhesive. The sections were stained 15-30 min in a saturated, filtered solution of Sudan black B in 70% alcohol, differentiated in 50% alcohol under microscopic observation, and a cover glass applied with glycerol-gelatin. In thick (50-100 μ) sections, myelin stained green to gray-green and this allowed easy differentiation between nerves and other tissue elements.  相似文献   

18.
Cells from monolayer culture of Chinese hamster line Don were treated by Colcemid (0.1 μg/ml) for 2 hr, trypsinized and spun; resuspended in 0.5% sodium citrate solution for 10 min, respun, and then resuspended in a small volume of the supernatant. Slide preparations were made by smearing, followed by air drying for 1 min at room temperature. They were fixed and stained by the following sequence: 2.5% glutaraldehyde in Millonig's buffer, 30 min; distilled water, 6 min, 5 changes; ammoniacal silver at 18-26 C, 10 sec; distilled water, 30 min, 5 changes; 2.5% formalin, 2 min; and distilled water, 3 changes during 15 min. Staining solution: add 225 ml of 5% Na2CO3 to 75 ml of 10% AgNO3, then add concentrated NH4OH slowly, drop by drop, until the solution is transparent. Finally add 300 ml of dstilled water. Cells treated with cold 0.25 N HCl before fixation were not stained. Sequence modifications show that chromatin does not reduce silver by itself. This method stains the sites of high histone concentrations in mitotic chromosomes of cytogenetic preparations.  相似文献   

19.
Extensive experimentation with protargol staining of neurons in celloidin and frozen sections of organs has resulted in the following technic: Fix tissue in 10% aqueous formalin. Cut celloidin sections IS to 25 μ, frozen sections 25 to 40 μ. Place sections for 24 hours in 50% alcohol to which 1% by volume of NH4OH has been added. Transfer the sections directly into a 1% aqueous solution of protargol, containing 0.2 to 0.3 g. of electrolytic copper foil which has been coated with a 0.5% solution of celloidin, and allow to stand for 6 to 8 hours at 37° C. Caution: In this and the succeeding step the sections must not be allowed to come in contact with the copper. From aqueous protargol, place the sections for 24 to 48 hours at 37° C. directly into a pyridinated solution of alcoholic protargol (1.0% aqueous solution protargol, 50 ml.; 95% alcohol, 50 ml.; pyridine, 0.5 to 2.0 ml.), containing 0.2 to 0.3 g. of coated copper. Rinse briefly in 50% alcohol and reduce 10 min. in an alkaline hydroquinone reducer (H3BO3, 1.4 g.; Na2SO3, anhydrous, 2.0 g.; hydroquinone, 0.3 g.; distilled water, 85 cc; acetone, 15 ml.). Wash thoroly in water and tone for 10 min. in 0.2% aqueous gold chloride, acidified with acetic acid. Wash in distilled water and reduce for 1 to 3 min. in 2% aqueous oxalic acid. Quickly rinse in distilled water and treat the sections 3 to 5 min. with 5% aqueous Na2S2O3+5H2O. Wash in water and stain overnight in Einarson's gallocyanin. Wash thoroly in water and place in 5% aqueous phosphotungstic acid for 30 min. From phosphotungstic acid transfer directly to a dilution (stock solution, 20 ml.; distilled water, 30 ml.) of the following stock staining solution: anilin blue, 0.01 g.; fast green FCF, 0.5 g.; orange G, 2.0 g.; distilled water, 92.0 ml.; glacial acetic acid, 8 ml.) and stain for 1 hour. Differentiate with 70% and 95% alcohol; pass the sections thru butyl alcohol and cedar oil; mount.  相似文献   

20.
Controlled silver staining of connective tissue fibers and sometimes of these fibers and cells simultaneously can be obtained. 1. Fix in 10% formalin. Embed in paraffin and cut sections as usual, but do not mount them on slides. Deparaffinize and hydrate through xylene, alcohols and distilled water and henceforth treat them the same as frozen sections. Real frozen sections can also be used. 2. Treat with a freshly prepared 1% solution of KMnO4, usually 15-60 sec, sometimes up to 10 min. 3. Wash in distilled water, 5-10 sec. 4. Decolorize in 2% potassium metabisulfite, 10-20 sec. 5. Place in distilled water, 1 min. 6. Sensitize with 2% iron alum, 1 min. 7. Place in distilled water, 1 min. 8. Impregnate in Gomori's silver oxide solution, 2 min. 9. Wash in a 1.5% aqueous solution of pyridine, about 15 sec. 10. Reduce in a mixture containing 0.25% gelatin and 2% formalin 1 min. 11. Repeat steps 7 to 10 once or several times until the connective tissue fibers are completely stained. For cell staining (which may fail) proceed as follows: After the first insufficient staining of the connective tissue fibers, rinse in distilled water, dip for 1 sec in Gomori's solution and reduce immediately in gelatin-formalin without previous washing in pyridined water. This step can be repeated. 12. If the staining is too strong, decolorize as needed in 2% iron alum. 13. Toning in 0.2% gold chloride, 5 min or more, followed by fixation in 5% sodium thiosulfate, 1 min, is optional. Counterstain as desired. 14. Wash in tap water, dehydrate, clear in xylene and mount in balsam. The same technique applied to sections attached to slides gives good results but inferior to that obtained in paraffin sections processed in the loose, unmounted condition.  相似文献   

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