Abstract
Sections were cut from a wide variety of tissues, and those from each block were divided into four groups before attaching and drying on slides. Four commonly accepted sources of heat were used for drying: (a) gas hotplate set at 65° C; (b) incubator, 37°; (c) oven, 56°; and (d) room temperature, 20°. After drying, the sections were stained, then examined for intensity of staining and for distortion caused by shrinkage. With both soft and decalcified tissue stained by haematoxylin and eosin, the best results occurred in the sections dried at 20° C; the next best at 37°. When stained by Van Gieson's method, both types of tissues were best after 20° drying, but the second-best group showed differences in favour of 56° for soft tissues and 37° for decalcified. After drying decalcified tissue at 65°, the staining of collagen by acid fuchsin was almost completely absent. When impregnated with silver, for reticulin, the best results for soft tissues were after 56° drying; second best, 20°; but decalcified tissues showed a reversal of this order. After PAS, there was an increasing intensity of staining from 20° to 65°, with soft tissue; evidence that histochemical interpretation could be strongly influenced by drying temperature.