Abstract
A new staining method has been developed for the study of nerve cells and Nissl granules which combines three basic dyes, cresylecht violet, toluidine blue and thionin. The use of this tri-basic-dye stain results in finished preparations that are critically stained and permanent. Paraffin sections (4 μ sections preferably) are mounted on slides by the starch medium, deparaffinized and stained by the tribasic staining solution. After differentiation in acidified distilled water, sections are dehydrated, returned to stain solution and again dehydrated, then cleared and mounted in Clarite. Various vertebrate material including normal and pathological human tissues have been stained with this triple dye solution. Especially for pathological material, re-immersion of slides in the staining and 80% alcohol solutions before mounting, differentially intensifies the staining reaction. Fixatives used were 10% formalin, 95% alcohol, Bouin and formalin-Bouin (10% formalin followed by Bouin).