Histological Methods Flashcards

1
Q

define plane of section

A

3D structures may appear different when thin sectioned

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2
Q

describe types of sections

A

cross section (circle)
oblique (oblong)
longitudinal (long rectangle)

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3
Q

what type of section are most samples in

A

oblique section

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4
Q

why can’t you created a perfect sample (plane of section)

A

cannot orient sample when in wax
can’t move it after so what is seen is based on plane of section

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5
Q

what is the thickness of a section

A

5um

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6
Q

what is the diameter of a cell

A

10 um

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7
Q

what is the diameter of a lysosome

A

200nm

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8
Q

what is the thickness of PM

A

75A (7.5 nm)

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9
Q

describe H&E stain

A

hematoxylin and eosin

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10
Q

describe hematoxylin

A

basic
stains basophilic structures
blue or purple

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11
Q

name structures stained by hematoxylin

A

cell nucleus and other structures
basophilic

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12
Q

describe eosin

A

acidic
stains eosinophilic structures
pink

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13
Q

name structures stained by eosin

A

cytoplasm and collagen

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14
Q

what does basophilic mean (give ex of structures)

A

structures with nucleic acids
ribosomes
chromatin rich nucleus
cytoplasmic regions rich in RNA

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15
Q

what does eosinophilic mean (give ex of structures)

A

structures composed of intra/extra cellular protein
most of cytoplasm

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16
Q

T or F: structures have to be basic/acidic to be dyed a certain colour

A

FALSE
it’s based on affinity to dyes

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17
Q

describe electron microscope (how image is created)

A

Electron generated by cathode travels in high vacuum and hits photograph plate (phosphorescent screen)

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18
Q

what is an electron lucent structure

A

when electron passes through - so doesn’t hit anything

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19
Q

what is an electron dense structure

A

when electron hits something and is deflected away

20
Q

describe resolving power of EM

A

2 dots come together
means that em can magnify way more than LM
LM = 1000x
EM = 160000x or 1.6 mil with cam zoom

21
Q

what are the types of ways to look at specimens

A

light microscopy
electron microscopy

22
Q

name the pathway to LM

A

chemical fixation
dehydration
clearing
infiltration
embedding
sectioning
mounting
removal of paragon
rehydration
staining
LM
OR
start with freezing —> sectioning and same ones down

23
Q

describe freezing & down for LM

A

a way to preserve the specimen
then sectioning = done with cryostat

24
Q

describe chemical fixation for LM

A

formalin
animal is anesthetized

25
Q

what is an advantage of bouins fluid

A

better for H&E stain

26
Q

what is perfusion and immersion

A

perfusion = inject into animal and works way inside out
immersion = take organ out and drop into fix and works way into tissue
want to stop decay and conserve ultrastructure

27
Q

which method is faster: perfusion or immersion

A

perfusion is better
penetrates better and faster

28
Q

describe dehydration for LM

A

dehydrate to put sample into blocks
need to get rid of water so increase concentration of ethanol (and decrease concentration of water)
want to use xylene to put tissue into wax blocks but water and xylene don’t mix

29
Q

describe clearing LM

A

xylene is a paraffin solvent

30
Q

describe infiltration LM

A

xylene/paraffin
adding dilute wax first (easier than adding to straight up wax)

31
Q

describe embedding LM

A

putting in paraffin

32
Q

describe sectioning LM

A

microtome
like a meat slicer

33
Q

describe mounting LM

A

using a glass slide

34
Q

describe removal of paraffin LM

A

using xylene to remove wax

35
Q

describe rehydration LM

A

describe concentration of ethanol (increase water) so it becomes an AQ solution

36
Q

describe staining LM

A

H&E and/or histochemical reaction
hematoxylin and eosin are water based so must first remove wax (removal of paraffin and rehydration)

37
Q

describe chemical fixation EM

A

gluteraldehyde and osmium tetroxide = very fast fixative
preferably perfusion

38
Q

describe dehydration EM

A

propylene glycol
doesn’t mix with water so must remove water

39
Q

describe clearing EM

A

propylene glycol
epoxy solvent

40
Q

describe infiltration EM

A

adding dilute plastic
propylene glycol/plastic

41
Q

describe embedding EM

A

straight plastic

42
Q

describe sectioning EM

A

ultramicrotome
very thin slices

43
Q

describe mounting EM

A

copper grid

44
Q

describe rehydration EM

A

there is NO REHYDRATION
plastic is fine to put on grid

45
Q

describe staining EM

A

lead citrate and/or histochemical reaction

46
Q

how does EM work

A

super thin slices go on grid and are blasted with electrons

47
Q

describe what happens when electrons fly at grid/sample

A

electrons can go through and burn a whole = electron lucent structure
electrons can hit lead or grid and it takes off = electron dense structure