BL - Investigative Techniques (done to slide 29) Flashcards

1
Q

How is cut tissue preserved to stop it from rotting?

A

Formalin is used

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2
Q

What is used to allow tissue to be cut very thinly for microscopy? (5 micrometers)

A

Melted paraffin which sets hard when cooled

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3
Q

What does haematoxylin stain and what colour does it stain it?

A

It stains the nucleus blue

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4
Q

What colour does eosin stain things, and what does it stain?

A

Cytoplasm and extracellular matrix, pink

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5
Q

What is a “frozen section”?

A

A specimen is placed on a metal disc and then frozen to -20 to -30 degrees C. It is then stained with H+E. It is very fast, but technical quality is low.

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6
Q

Two samples are taken from two different patients and viewed using polarised light microscopy. One shows long thin crystals and one shows rhomboid crystals. Which is gout?

A

Long thin = gout.

Rhomboid = pseudogout

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7
Q

True or false - fluorescent microscopy can be used to diagnose cancer?

A

True.

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8
Q

True or false - confocal microscopy is never combined with fluorescent microscopy?

A

False, they often are.

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9
Q

What makes confocal microscopy different to normal microscopy?

A

A pinhole is placed art the confocal plane of the lens to eliminate out of focus light, which enables sharper 3D images to be created.

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10
Q

How does immunohistochemical staining work?

A

Antigens in the cells of a tissue section can be detected by labelled antibodies binding to them.

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11
Q

Describe the process of autoradiography.

A

A photographic emulsion is used to visualise molecules labelled with radioactive marker. The marker is first injected into the live animal/cell culture. The histological section is then coated with the emulsion.

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12
Q

True or false - higher frequency (shorter wavelength) gives a better resolution?

A

True

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13
Q

Why does transmission electron microscopy have a better resolution than light microscopy?

A

The wavelength is 1 nanometre compared to light microscopy which uses 400 nanometres.

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14
Q

Why do some portions of an image created by TEM seem dark?

A

These portions have absorbed electrons, while the beam has passed straight through the light sections.

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15
Q

How is a sample prepared for viewing with a TEM?

A

Fix with glutaraldehyde, embed in epoxy resin, stain (eg. Osmium tetroxide), use microtome with diamond knives.

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16
Q

What is “freeze fracture electron microscopy”?

A

The tissue is frozen to -160 degrees C and fractured by hitting it with a knife edge. The fracture line passes through the plasma membrane, exposing its interior.

17
Q

How does scanning electron microscopy differ from TEM?

A

In SEM, the electrons are reflected back rather than through a sample. They create a 3D image of a living sample.