Grinding Thin Sections of Plastic-Embedded Bone |
| |
Authors: | Benjamin N. Kropp |
| |
Affiliation: | a Laboratory of Histology and Embryology, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada |
| |
Abstract: | The method describes an adaptation of a metallurgical procedure whereby dry, calcined bone may be simultaneously infiltrated and embedded in a transparent plastic, Transoptic, and then ground to the desired thinness for microscopic observation with transmitted light. A 2 mm.-thick specimen of bone, ground smooth on one side, is placed ground side up in a 1' mold assembly of a metallurgical specimen mount press. About 5 ml. of the plastic medium is added, the temperature raised to 130° C, and the pressure raised to 100 pounds. When 130° C. is reached, the heater is disconnected, the pressure immediately raised to 3500 pounds and maintained at that level until the mold cools to 68° C. The pressure is then released and the 5 mm.-thick plastic disc, with the embedded specimen therein, expressed from the mold. Grinding, as well as polishing, is dry; abrasives in fluid media are not used. The disc and specimen are coarse ground on #340 grit dry silicon carbide paper until histological details begin to appear. Final fine grinding is done on #600 grit dry silicon carbide paper. The disc is then polished and may be mounted on a 1 × 3 Plexiglas slide. |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 InformaWorld 等数据库收录! |
|