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1.
Frozen sections of formalin-fixed brains containing surgical lesions, were treated with 15% ethanol for 0.5 hr., soaked in 0.5% phosphomolybdic acid for 0.25-1.0 hr., and subsequently treated with 0.05% potassium permanganate for 4-10 min. (The duration of the latter treatment is critical and individually variable). Subsequent procedure is as follows: decolorize in a mixture of equal parts of 1% hydroquinone and 1% oxalic acid; wash thoroughly and soak sections in 1.5% silver nitrate for 20-30 min.; ammoniacal silver nitrate (silver nitrate 0.9 g., distilled water 20 ml., pure ethanol 10 ml., strong ammonia 1.8 ml., 2.5% sodium hydroxide 1.5 ml.) 0.5-1.0 min.; reduce in acidified formalin (distilled water 400 ml., pure ethanol 45 ml., 1% citric acid 13.5 ml., 10% formalin 13.5 ml.) 1 min.; wash, and pass section through 1 % sodium thiosulf ate (0.5-1.0 min.); wash thoroughly and pass sections through graded alcohols and xylene (3 changes); cover in neutral synthetic resin.  相似文献   

2.
A paraffin section method is described with a yellow-brown-black color range comparable to that of Ranson's pyridine silver block stain. After impregnation with activated protargol and reduction with a fine grain photographic developer, silver nitrate impregnation and reduction are repeated as often as necessary. The procedure is as follows:

Place hydrated sections of tissue fixed in chloral hydrate (25 g. in 100 ml. of 50% alcohol) in 1% aqueous protargol (Winthrop Chemical Co.) containing 5-6 g. metallic copper for 12-24 hours. After rinsing in 2 changes of distilled water, reduce 5 to 10 minutes in: Elon (Eastman Kodak Co.) 0.2 g., Na2SO3, dessicated, 10 g., hydroquinone 0.5 g., sodium borate powder 0.1 g., distilled water 100 ml. Wash thoroly in 4 or 5 changes of distilled water and place in 1% aqueous AgNO3 for 10-20 minutes at 28°-50° C. Rinse in 2 or 3 changes of distilled water and reduce in the elon-hydroquinone solution. After thoroly washing in 4 or 5 changes of distilled water, examine under microscope.

If too pale, treat again in silver nitrate for 10-20 minutes, rinse, reduce 5-10 minutes and wash thoroly until nerve fibers show distinct microscopic differentiation, then dehydrate, clear and mount.  相似文献   

3.
The silver impregnation method of Fink and Heimer (Brain Res., 4: 369-74, 1967) has been used on cryostat sections of both fresh frozen and formalin-fixed brain tissue mounted on slide. The fixed brains were soaked in 25% sucrose for 2-3 days before freezing. The slides used for mounting were dipped in a 0.5% aqueous gelatin solution containing 50 mg of chrome-alum per 100 ml, drained and allowed to dry in a vertical position. Sections of fresh tissue were fixed for 16 hr in a 10% formalin solution buffered with phosphates to pH 7.0. Staining was carried out according to the Fink-Heimer procedure II and gave results comparable to those obtained on unmounted frozen sections of formalin-fixed material  相似文献   

4.
The silver impregnation method of Fink and Heimer (Brain Res., 4: 369-74, 1967) has been used on cryostat sections of both fresh frozen and formalin-fixed brain tissue mounted on slide. The fixed brains were soaked in 25% sucrose for 2-3 days before freezing. The slides used for mounting were dipped in a 0.5% aqueous gelatin solution containing 50 mg of chrome-alum per 100 ml, drained and allowed to dry in a vertical position. Sections of fresh tissue were fixed for 16 hr in a 10% formalin solution buffered with phosphates to pH 7.0. Staining was carried out according to the Fink-Heimer procedure II and gave results comparable to those obtained on unmounted frozen sections of formalin-fixed material  相似文献   

5.
Rat and rabbit brains containing surgical lesions of 5-10 days' duration were fixed in 10% formalin (neutralized with calcium carbonate) for 1 week to 6 months. Frozen sections (15-20 n) were rinsed and then soaked 7 minutes in a 1.7% solution of strong ammonia in distilled water. Subsequent treatment was as follows: rinse; 0.05% aqueous potassium permanganate 5-15 minutes; 0.5% aqueous potassium metabisulfite, 2 changes of 2.5 minutes each; wash thoroughly in 3 changes distilled water; 1.5% aqueous silver nitrate, 0.5-1.0 hr.; 1% citric acid, 5-10 sec.; 2 changes distilled water; 1% sodium thiosulfate, 30 see.; 3 changes distilled water. Each section is then processed separately. Ammoniacal silver solution (450 mg. silver nitrate in 10 ml. distilled water; add 5 ml. ethanol; let cool to room temperature; add 1 ml. strong ammonia water and 0.9 ml. of 2.5% aqueous sodium hydroxide), 0.5-1.0 min. with gentle agitation. Reduction of about 1 minute is accomplished in: distilled water, 45 ml.; ethanol, 5 ml.; 10% formalin, 1.5 ml.; 1% citric acid, 1.5 ml. Rinsing; 1% sodium thiosulfate, 10 sec.; thorough washing followed by dehydration through graded alcohol and 3 changes of xylene or toluene complete the staining process. Normal nerve fibers are slightly stained to unstained, degenerating fibers, black. The treatment in potassium permanganate is critical since too little favors overstaining of normal fibers and too much abolishes staining of degenerating fibers.  相似文献   

6.
Paraffin embedding was found to be satisfactory for brain stained by a modification of the Golgi dichromate-silver method. Nitrocellulose embedding caused fading in a few specimens. Several modifications in which the tissue was impregnated with silver nitrate before treating it with potassium dichromate were investigated. The following one is recommended. Fix pieces of brain 5-6 mm. thick for 2 days in: silver nitrate;0.5%, 90 ml.; formalin, comml. unneutralized (37-40% gas), 10 ml.; pyridine, pure, 0.05-0.1 ml. Mix in the order given and test for pH with brom cresol purple. A pH of 5.5-6.0 is about optimum and the amount of pyridine added can be varied to adjust it. A slight turbidity of the fixing fluid may be disregarded, but precipitation indicates too much alkalinity. Rinse the tissues with distilled water and place them in a mixture of potassium dichromate, 2.5%, 100 ml. and osmic acid, 1%, 1 ml., for 3-5 days. Wash in water, dehydrate with alcohol and embed in soft paraffin for thick sectioning. Greater intensity of staining (but with an increase in precipitate) can be secured by rinsing the blocks after the dichromate treatment and resilvering in a 0.5% solution of silver nitrate for a day or two, then washing, dehydrating and embedding. This modification of the Golgi method was worked out on brain of adult rat, guinea pig, cat and monkey. Results with fetal material were not good. All solutions used were aqueous, and staining was done at room temperature.  相似文献   

7.
Paraffin embedding was found to be satisfactory for brain stained by a modification of the Golgi dichromate-silver method. Nitrocellulose embedding caused fading in a few specimens. Several modifications in which the tissue was impregnated with silver nitrate before treating it with potassium dichromate were investigated. The following one is recommended. Fix pieces of brain 5-6 mm. thick for 2 days in: silver nitrate;0.5%, 90 ml.; formalin, comml. unneutralized (37-40% gas), 10 ml.; pyridine, pure, 0.05-0.1 ml. Mix in the order given and test for pH with brom cresol purple. A pH of 5.5-6.0 is about optimum and the amount of pyridine added can be varied to adjust it. A slight turbidity of the fixing fluid may be disregarded, but precipitation indicates too much alkalinity. Rinse the tissues with distilled water and place them in a mixture of potassium dichromate, 2.5%, 100 ml. and osmic acid, 1%, 1 ml., for 3-5 days. Wash in water, dehydrate with alcohol and embed in soft paraffin for thick sectioning. Greater intensity of staining (but with an increase in precipitate) can be secured by rinsing the blocks after the dichromate treatment and resilvering in a 0.5% solution of silver nitrate for a day or two, then washing, dehydrating and embedding. This modification of the Golgi method was worked out on brain of adult rat, guinea pig, cat and monkey. Results with fetal material were not good. All solutions used were aqueous, and staining was done at room temperature.  相似文献   

8.
Coronary arterioles and pulmonary air passages of dogs could be injected completely with a carbon-gelatin mixture heated at the start of the injection to 52-58°C. Formula: chloral hydrate, 40 gm; carbon (Peerless Black, Columbian Carbon Co., 214 44th St., Brooklyn, N. Y.), 20-40 gm; distilled water, 950 ml; mix thoroughly in a Waring blendor, then add a mixture of Tween 80 (Atlas Powder Co., Wilmington, Del.), 20 ml; and water, 30 ml at 40°C, and agitate to a homogeneous suspension. For use, mix equal parts of the suspension and a 16% gelatin solution (Bacto-Gelatin, Difco Laboratories Inc., Detroit, Mich.) at 52-58°C. With this material the precapillary arterioles may be microscopically studied in relation to their myocardial distribution and the finer respiratory passages of lung investigated, providing all the apparatus with which the solution comes in contact is clean and the combined carbon-gelatin mass is injected shortly after mixing.  相似文献   

9.
Pieces of mammalian nerves 1 to 2 cm. long were placed under moderate tension and fixed 24-48 hours in: picric acid, saturated aqueous, 90 ml.; formalin, 10 ml.; and trichloracetic acid, 25% aqueous, 2 ml. They were washed in water, cut in two and one end stained with 0.04-0.06% osmic acid solution, while the other was dehydrated, embedded in paraffin, and mounted sections from it stained with protargol. The fixing solution used was selected from a number of combinations of acidified picro-formalin as the one most likely to give satisfactory results when followed by both silver and osmic acid. The use of osmic acid solutions of less than 0.1% concentration avoided the overstaining of myelin sheaths seen frequently when stronger solutions were used with material that had been fixed previously. Protargol, 0.5% solution with fast green FCF added to make 0.05% dye in the final concentration, was used to impregnate sections for axis cylinders. Reduction and toning were done as in Bodian's method.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
Slices of cat brains that had been fixed in 10% aqueous formalin for various periods from 2 days to over a year were subjected to different types of chromation prior to impregnation with silver nitrate. Acid solutions of Al, Ba, Ca, Cd, Ce, Co, Cu, Fe, K, Ni, Sr and Zn chromates were tested for usefulness as chromating agents. The chromates of Cd, Co, K, Sr and Zn were found to be best; Ca, Ce and Ni gave positive results, but Al, Ba, Cu and Fe were quite unsatisfactory. Acetic acid was somewhat preferable to formic as the acidifying agent. A formula consisting of potassium chromate, 5% aq., 100 ml. and glacial acetic acid 6-8 ml. was found to be similar in action to comparable mixtures that contained the chromate of Cd, Co, Sr or Zn. Brain slices chromated 24-48 hours in these acidified chromates and silvered in 0.75-1.0% silver nitrate for 12-24 hours at 37-40° C. gave at least three times as many good preparations as similar specimens chromated with plain potassium dichromate solution.  相似文献   

12.
Soluble derivatives of the AgNO3 precipitates of various split protein products were prepared by dissolving the precipitate in a 30-40% aqueous solution of pharmaceutical peptone (Cudahy). The split proteins used included pepsin, trypsin and papain digests of albumin, globulin, gelatin, casein, protamine, and tissue proteins from heart, liver and brain; also, an Escherichia coli digest of casein, and commercial products: Amigen (Mead), casein hydrolysate (Squibb) and pharmaceutical peptone (Cudahy). Staining reactions of the silver derivatives were tested on mammalian nervous tissue. The objective of finding a silver-protein compound that stained axis cylinders selectively was attained only with redissolved silver precipitates of pharmaceutical peptone and bacterially digested casein. It was concluded that the manner of degrading a protein prior to combining it with silver was the most important factor in determining the subsequent staining reaction.  相似文献   

13.
The dye base of new fuchsin was precipitated by adding potassium hydroxide to the dye solution. The precipitate was filtered out and washed with water. It was then suspended in water, brought into solution and adjusted to a pH of about 5.0 with nitric acid. The staining solution was prepared by adding 0.3 ml. of a 14% aqueous solution of pyrogallol and 0.1 ml. of a 1% aqueous solution of boric acid to 3.0 ml. of the dye solution. Smears of cells were made in water on a slide and allowed to dry before covering with the staining solution which was also permitted to air dry. The smear was then washed in water and mordanted for 5-20 seconds in a 0.1% aqueous solution of mercuric nitrate. After rinsing in water, the smear was air dried. When dry, the slide was placed on a 50° C. warm plate for a few seconds before covering with a very thin film of a 5% aqueous solution of nigrosin which had a pH of about 5.0.  相似文献   

14.
Staining of Nervous Tissue by Protein-Silver Mixtures   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A staining method for nerves in paraffin sections is described in which an egg albumen-silver nitrate mixture is the impregnating solution. Blocks of tissue are fixed in Bouin's fixative, formol, Huber's fixative or formol-acetic-alcohol, and decalcified if necessary in Bensley's decalcifier. Sections are impregnated overnight, in the dark, at 37-56°C in a solution containing 50 ml of filtered, aqueous 0.5% dried egg albumen with 1.8-2.5 ml of 2% silver nitrate and adjusted to pH 8.2-8.3 by the addition of ammonia. The sections are then rinsed in distilled water and the silver reduced in a mixture of hydroquinone, 1 gm; anhydrous sodium sulfite, 10 gm and distilled water, 100 ml. The remainder of the process consists of washing, gold toning, fixing in 5% sodium thiosulfate, washing, dehydrating, clearing and mounting. Casein may be used as an alternative to egg albumen in the impregnating solution (0.5% casein, 50 ml; 2% silver nitrate, 1 ml). The pH value of the solution may be adjusted by a boric acid-borax buffer or ammonium hydrogen tetraborate in the place of ammonia.  相似文献   

15.
A staining method to increase the contrast of sectioned material for phase contrast microscopy is described. Two stock solutions of the stain are required. The first is made by dissolving 2 gm of luxol fast blue MBS in 100 ml of 95% ethanol. The second solution is made up of 4 ml of a 29% aqueous solution of FeCl3, 95 ml of 95% ethanol, and 1 ml of concentrated HCl. The staining solution is made by mixing equal parts of the two solutions. Sections are deparaffinized and taken to 70% alcohol, stained for 1.5 hr, dehydrated, cleared and covered as usual.  相似文献   

16.
A staining method to increase the contrast of sectioned material for phase contrast microscopy is described. Two stock solutions of the stain are required. The first is made by dissolving 2 gm of luxol fast blue MBS in 100 ml of 95% ethanol. The second solution is made up of 4 ml of a 29% aqueous solution of FeCl3, 95 ml of 95% ethanol, and 1 ml of concentrated HCl. The staining solution is made by mixing equal parts of the two solutions. Sections are deparaffinized and taken to 70% alcohol, stained for 1.5 hr, dehydrated, cleared and covered as usual.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
On the loss of gangliosides by dialysis   总被引:6,自引:3,他引:3  
The Gangliosides represent a family of sialic acidcontaining sphingoglycolipids which have ceramide (N-acyl-sphingosine) as the basic hydrophobic portion (Svennerholm , 1972). A heteropolysaccharide is glycosidically linked through the primary hydroxyl group of ceramide and the aldehyde of glucose. There are usually three or four different carbohydrates and up to a total of seven in the chain. The isolated gangliosides are soluble both in organic and aqueous solvents presumably because of their content of both hydrophobic and hydrophilic groups. The most commonly employed extraction procedure is based upon their solubility in chloroform-methanol (2: 1, v/v) and subsequent partitioning into an aqueous methanol phase (FOLCH, LEES and SLOANE-STANLEY, 1957). This methanolic solution is then dialysed against water to remove small molecular-weight contaminants. This paper reports the loss of gangliosides upon dialysis when they are present at low concentrations. Gangliosides were prepared from fresh calf brain as previously described (Kanfer , 1969) and contained 25-25% GMl, as judged by quantitative thin-layer chromatography (Suzuki , 1964). GM2 was prepared from this material by treatment with neuraminidase as previously described (Kolodny , Brady , Quirk and Kanfer , 1970) and purified by the procedure of Winterbourne (1971). GM2 was isolated from brain tissue of a Tay-Sachs child provided by Dr. B. Volk. Thin-layer chromatography was carried out on Analtech Silica Gel G plates (Analtech Co., Wilmington, Del.) with chloroformmethanol-2.5 N NH4OH (60 : 30 : 8, by vol.) as developing solvent. Total sialic acid was quantified by the resorcinol procedure according to Suzuki (1964). Duplicate known quantities of gangliosides were dissolved in 2 ml of methanol 41 M KCI(1 : 1, v/v) and dialysed overnight in untreated Visking tubing (0.22-in. dia.; Fisher Scientific Co., Pittsburgh, Pa.; Cat. No. 1000) against a 500-fold vol. of distilled water at 4°C. The contents of the sacs were removed and the total volume was measured; a 10-1 5 per cent increase in volume was usually observed. Portions were analysed in duplicate for total sialic acid content, and the remainder was lyophilized for examination by TLC.  相似文献   

19.
Fundus of stomach is fixed in 10% formalin (aqueous), Bouin's fluid or 5% trichloracetic acid (aqueous). It is embedded in paraffin, and 7μ sections are cut, mounted, deparaffinized and passed to 70% alcohol and then stained as follows: Mordant 3 min. in saturated Bismarck brown in 70% alcohol. Rinse in 70% alcohol, pass to distilled water, then overstain (2 hr.) in aniline blue, 0.5% solution in 2.5% acetic acid (aqueous). Precipitate the anilin blue with 0.5 ml. of 0.1% methyl violet solution (aqueous) dropped on die slide. Leave on 2 min. or less. Wash and differentiate in 70% alcohol. (Parietal cells dark blue). Stain 30 min. in a mixture of hematein, 0.10g.; A1C13 cryst., 0.05g.; and 70% alcohol 50 ml., prepared just before use and not filtered. Rinse in 70% alcohol and differentiate with an alcoholic extract of saffron (2 g. saffron pistils in 100 ml. 90% alcohol at 60°C. for 6 hr.) while observing the progress of differentiation microscopically. Dehydrate by dropping a 0.1 % solution of acetic acid in absolute alcohol on the section for 30 sec., followed by pure absolute alcohol, xylene, and covering in balsam.  相似文献   

20.
The procedure recommended is: Fix “marrow units” (small functional structures of bone marrow) in 10% formol-saline solution for 1-2 hours and dehydrate in 80% alcohol, 95% alcohol and acetone 30 minutes each. Place in fresh 50° and 53°C. paraffin for 30 minutes each. Embed in fresh 53°C. paraffin. Serially section at 5μ thickness and mount with Schleicher's floating solution. Allow to dry for 1 hour in an oven and deparaffinize by passing through xylene I and II, absolute alcohol I and II, and 95% alcohol. Rinse in fresh distilled water and place in dilute Harris' hematoxylin (stock solution 50 ml., distilled water 200 ml.) for 2 to 3 minutes. Rinse well in distilled water and check staining under the microscope. Dip in acid-alcohol 5 times (1 dip to equal about 1 second). Rinse well in weak (0.02%) ammonia water and distilled water. Dip in 2% aqueous phosphotungstic acid about 3 to 5 times (equal to 3-5 seconds). Rinse in fresh distilled water and place in weak ammonia water for 1 minute. Rinse in fresh distilled water I and II. Place in 80% alcohol for 5 minutes and check under the microscope for “blueness” and nuclear differentiation. Place in dilute alcoholic eosin (0.5% alcohol-eosin stock solution 10 parts and 95% alcohol 90 parts) for 1 to 2 minutes. Rinse in 80% alcohol and place for 1 minute in 95% alcohol. Check under the microscope for staining quality. Place in absolute alcohol for 1 minute, alcohol-xylene (equal parts), 10 dips, and xylene I and II. Mount. This hematoxylin-eosin staining schedule brings out minute structural detail of bone marrow tissue heretofore not demonstrable.  相似文献   

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