Staining Sections of Peripheral Nerves for Axis Cylinders and for Myelin Sheaths
- 1 January 1948
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Stain Technology
- Vol. 23 (4), 191-196
- https://doi.org/10.3109/10520294809106247
Abstract
Pieces of mammalian nerves 1 to 2 cm. long were placed under moderate tension and fixed 24–48 hours in: picric acid, saturated aqueous, 90 ml.; formalin, 10 ml.; and trichloracetic acid, 25% aqueous, 2 ml. They were washed in water, cut in two and one end stained with 0.04–0.06% osmic acid solution, while the other was dehydrated, embedded in paraffin, and mounted sections from it stained with protargol. The fixing solution used was selected from a number of combinations of acidified picro-formalin as the one most likely to give satisfactory results when followed by both silver and osmic acid. The use of osmic acid solutions of less than 0.1% concentration avoided the overstaining of myelin sheaths seen frequently when stronger solutions were used with material that had been fixed previously. Protargol, 0.5% solution with fast green FCF added to make 0.05% dye in the final concentration, was used to impregnate sections for axis cylinders. Reduction and toning were done as in Bodian's method.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Stainability of Nerve Fibers by Protargol With Various Fixatives And Staining TechnicsStain Technology, 1947
- A Protargol Method for Staining Nerve Fibers in Frozen or Celloidin SectionsStain Technology, 1943
- A new method for staining nerve fibers and nerve endings in mounted paraffin sectionsThe Anatomical Record, 1936