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Original Article

A One-Solution Triacid General Stain Which Differentiates Oxygenated from Non-Oxygenated Red Blood Corpuscles

Pages 247-253 | Published online: 12 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

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.

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