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Original Article

Hydroxyethyl Methacrylate Combined with Polyethylene Glycol 400 and Water; an Embedding Medium for Routine 1–2 Micron Sectioning

Pages 119-123 | Published online: 12 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Pieces of tissue, with the largest dimension not exceeding 7 mm, are fixed and dehydrated by the procedures of choice. Two stock solutions: A, for infiltration; and B, the accelerator, are used in embedding. Formulas: A, 80 ml of glycol methacrylate (2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate—Rohm and Haas Co., Philadelphia, Pa.) is mixed well with 12 ml of polyethylene glycol (Carbowax) 400 and 8 ml of water; then 0.27 gm of benzoyl peroxide added, heated to dissolve the peroxide, and allowed to cool to room temperature. B, polyethylene 200 or 400, 15 parts, and N,N-dimethylaniline, 1 part, mixed thoroughly. Tissues are first infiltrated completely with solution A, then cast in a mixture consisting of 42 parts of A mixed with 1 part of B. Polymerization occurs in 45 min to 3 hr, depending on the temperature. In a water bath at 20 C, the time required was found to be about 3 hr; at 25 C, 1.5 hr; and at 30 C, 45 min. The plastic block can be trimmed easily, and sections 1–2 μ thick readily cut. Sections can be attached to slides by water flotation, without adhesive, and should be dried at room temperature. Staining with aqueous solutions of basic and acid dyes, without removing the embedding matrix, is sharp and brilliant. When staining of the matrix by basic dyes occurs, this background stain can be completely removed by differentiating in either 2-butoxyethanol, pure ethanol, or a mixture of the two. A number of histochemical reagents have been found compatible with this embedding procedure.

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