The Value of Alcohol for Fixation of Skin

Abstract
Stained sections of skin fixed in 70% alcohol were compared with others from pieces fixed in 4% formaldehyde-saline. The sections of alcohol-fixed material were much more susceptible to the action of deoxyribonuclease and lipase than those from formalin-fixed, as demonstrated by a standardized hematoxylin staining method and by fluorescence microscopy. After formalin, cytoplasmic basophilia was increased, presumably because formalin fixation caused ribonucleic acid to diffuse from nuclei to cytoplasm. Both types of fixation damaged collagen, as seen in fluorescence induced by 5-anvmo-2-chloro-7-methoxyacridine, but alcohol caused less distortion than formalin. Probably fluorochroming of fresh tissue is the only satisfactory method for studying collagen in pathological conditions.