A Cresyl Fast Violet Stain for Bacteria and Fungi in Tissue

Abstract
The cresyl fast violet staining method was modified to eliminate differentiation. Paraffin sections from tissues fixed in Zenker-formol were stained in a 1% aqueous solution of cresyl fast violet (Chroma), adjusted to pH 3.7 with acetic acid, washed in running tap water, dehydrated and covered. Because basophilia increases with time of fixation or storage in formalin or Kaiserling's fluid, dilution of the dye solution to 0.5-0.1% is recommended for such material. Bacteria, nuclei, Nissl substance, and lipofuscin were colored dark blue; fungi, blue to purple; and cytoplasm and muscle fibers, light blue. Collagen and reticulum fibers were only faintly stained. Thus, microorganisms were easily visible against the lightly colored background. In formalin-fixed material, bile pigment was colored olive green. Because this method does not require differentiation, it gave uniform results even in the hands of different users. Little or no fading was observed in sections stored for more than 2 yr.

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