fixation
recommended for fixation of central nervous tissues
10% formol saline
recommended for storage of surgical, post mortem and research specimen
10% neutral buffered formalin
fixation time of formaldehyde
24 hours
stock solution of formaldehyde
37%-40%
used to wash excess amount of picric acid (bouin's solution)
50-70% alcohol
commonly used for bone marrow biobsies
B-5 fixative
two aldehyde fixatives that have been particularly useful for electron cytochemistry
Karnovsky's paraformaldehyde-glutaraldehyde acrolein
used at temperature ranging from-5℃ to 4℃. for study of phosphatases and lipases. fixing brain tissues for diagnosis of rabies.
acetone
the most useful fixatives for preserving glycogen
alcohol based ex) Rossman's fluid, cold absolute alcohol
what fixatives are generally recommended for glycogen fixation
alcoholic fixatives
fixation is faster, used for rapid diagnosis and it is used to fix sputum
alcoholic formalin
used to remove excessive mercuric fixatives
alcoholic iodine
fixatives for phosopholipids that contain amino groups
aldehyde becker's formol calcium
this type of fixatives are satisfactory for routine parrafin sections, for electron microscopy, and when histochemical and enzyme studies are indicated
aldehyde fixatives
recommended for fixation of embryos and pituitary biopsies
bouin's solution
excellent fixative for glycogen
brasil's alcoholic picroformol fixative
recommended for fixing chromosomes, lymph glands and for diagnosis of rabies
carnoy's fluid
better retention of glycogen if the section is coated with what?
celloidin
no glacial acetic acid. for testes, oligospermia, study of infertility. cytoplasmic fixative.
champy's fixative
precipitates all proteins and preserves lipids
chromic acid
absolute alcohol, glacial acetic acid. excellent for mitochondrial fats. nuclear fixative.
clark's fixative
artifact found in surgical specimen
crush artifact
ficatives that preserve specific parts and particular microscopic elements of the cell itself
cytologic fixatives
cholesterol may be fixed with what fixative for ultrastructural demonstration?
digitonin
10% formol saline preserves what?
enzymes nucleoproteins fats mucin
used at concentrations 70-100%. may be used as simple or compound fixative.
ethyl alcohol
artifact that is produced under acid conditions
formalin pigment
destroys mitochondria and golgi elements of cells
glacial acetic acid
used in conjunction with other fixatives. fixes and precipitates nucleoproteins. causes tissue to swell.
glacial acetic acid
satisfactory for electron microscopy more stable preserves plasma protein
glutaraldehyde
involves thermal coagulation of tissue proteins for rapid diagnosis
heat fixation
recommended for tumor biopsies. excellent cytologic fixative
heidenhain's susa solution
ultrastructural demonstration of lipids has been achieved by post fixing in what fixative
imidazole osmium tetroxide
soaking tissue to 10- 20 times the volume of the tissue
immersion
used for fixing touch preparations
isopropyl alcohol 95%
recommended for acid mucopolysaccharides and it fixes connective tissue mucin
lead fixatives
most common metalic fixative
mercuric chloride
fixatives that can be effective for preservation of lipids in cryostat sections
mercuric chloride potassium dichromate
excellent for fixing dry and wet smears
methy alcohol 100%
fixatives that permit the general microscopic study of tissue structures without altering the structural pattern and normal intercellular relationship of the tissue
microanatomical fixatives
increases movement of molecules and accelerate fixation, staining, decalcification, immunohistochemistry and electron microscopy.
microwave technique
what fixatives are the most commonly used fixatives for amino acid histochemistry
neutral buffered formol saline of formaldehyde
acts as both nuclear and histochemical fixative
newcomer's fluid
demostrates rickettsiae and preserves myelin
orth's fluid
preserves cytoplasmic structures. brilliant staining with safranin. for ultrathin sectioning in electron microscopy
osmium tetroxide (osmic acid)
pH of nuclear fixatives
pH4.6
intense eosinophilic staining may be due to what
partial coagulation of partially fixed protein by ethanol. incomplete wax impregnation.
injecting fixative to heart
perfusion
formalin pigment can be reduced by fixation in
phenol formalin
2.5%-3% potassium dichromate for 24 hours to act as mordant for better staining. aid in cytologic preservation of tissues
post chromatization
the presence of this substance prevents complete penetration of fixative. fixed slowly and poorly.
presence of mucus
recommended for demonstration of chromatin and mitochondria
regard's (muller's) fluid
process of placing an already fixed tissue in a second fixative
secondary fixation
marked swelling effect on tissues. weak decalcifying agent.
trichloroacetic acid
process of removing excess fixative from tissue after fixation
washing out
mercury chloride with glacial acetic acid
zenker's fluid
excellent microanatomic fixative for pituitary gland, bone marrow and blood containing organs
zenker-formol (Helly's solution)